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THE HUGUENOT /^^~ 



Bartkolomew Dupuy 



AND 



HIS DESCENDANTS. 



By 
REV. B. H. DUPUY, 

PASTOR OF THE PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. 
BEVERLY. W. VA. 



They declared their pedigrees after their families, 
by the house of their fathers." — Num. 1 : 18. 



LOUISVILLE. KY.: 
COURIER-JOURNAL JOB PRINTING CO. 

1908. 



jLIBHAfiY of (W)lv'!5F:i:S3' 
iwo UoDles rittt--i.,. 

APK / ii^OO 
4 q £ r 3 

'copy 6. 






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COPYRIGHT. 190 8. 

By 

B. H. DUPUY. 



lo the many thousand descendants of 

Bartholomew Dupuy, 
Scattered throughout the United States, 

and 

Especially to my beloved children, 

and 

Children's children. 

This 

Volume is affectionately dedicated 
By their relative. 



PREFACE. 



The author has long contemplated the publica- 
tion of such a volume as this. The main reason, 
which has induced him to do so, has been the long 
and wide felt desire of the descendants of Bartholo- 
mew Dupuy for such a volume, that the data rela- 
tive to the whole subject, and the lines of descent 
from him might be collated, preserved, and handed 
down to rising generations, before time had ground 
them into dust and all tradition been buried in the 
grave of oblivion. The work has been in contem- 
plation and partial preparation for more than a 
quarter of a century, but it has been only of recent 
years that it was undertaken with the determina- 
tion to effect its completion. 

The preparation has been attended with much 
tedious labor and persevering energy, as well as 
the exercise of great patience, of which no one 
knows anything save him who has undertaken or 
assisted in such a task. In these times, when peo- 
ple are driving heedlessly ahead, if not to hoard up 
riches, at least to become independent, often in dis- 
regard of obligations to their fellow men, many of 
the descendants take little or no interest in their 
ancestry; and whether they knew anything of im- 
portance on the subject or not, they would not an- 
swer letters, and furnish that data necessary to 
make a volume like this valuable to generations 
unborn. Hence the author is conscious of the in- 
completeness and imperfections of the work arising 
from such indifference, but hopes the book may 



vi PREFACE. 

prove a basis in years to come of greater complete- 
ness and perfection. As far as it goes, the volume 
is quite reliable, having been founded upon well 
authenticated statements and facts; the author 
trying to avoid drawing on his imagination, which 
in some instances might have been excusable, and 
might have added interest to the volume, if not real 
value. 

The book is unique in its make-up. It is neither 
strictly biography nor history. While partaking 
of those kinds of literature, such a work from its 
title must strike a mean betwixt the two. To 
strictly develop either line to its usual limits would 
make the work unreasonably voluminous and 
bunglesome. The object has been to sketch the life 
of an honorable ancestor as far as known, and to 
preserve the lines of descent from him, and thereby 
show that his posterity, instead of defaming his 
name, have in the main and to a wonderful degree 
appreciated and honored it from generation to gen- 
eration. To do this history and biography have 
been concisely, but we hope sufficiently blended for 
the purpose. 

It has seemed specially necessary to the author 
that such a book should contain, as an Introduction, 
a brief account of the Rise and Progress of the 
Huguenots in France to the time of the appearance 
of Bartholomew Dupuy in history. This is neces- 
sary as a beneficial effect upon his living descend- 
ants, by way of enhancing their appreciation of the 
causes which gave rise to the Huguenots, as well 
as a due appreciation of their valor, character, and 
sincere religious belief. Until one knows the foun- 
dation upon which his family is built, it is not 
likely that he will appreciate the fact of its having 



PREFACE. vii 

a foundation at all. But when he knows, as it 
were, the cause of which he is an effect, the source 
whence he has come, the trials and hardships of hia 
ancestors, which made them what they were, and 
whose nature, blood, and principles he himself has 
inherited; and when it is shown him that for two 
cenluries these elements and principles have clung 
to the descendants and have operated to make them 
honorable and successful also, then he will think 
there is something in them, and will more likely 
appreciate, and live by them, and teach his poster- 
ity the same. We urge, therefore, the close and 
patient perusal of the Introduction, as the founda- 
tion of due appreciation of the book. If any per- 
manent good is to come to the descendants and 
their posterity from its publication, it will be de- 
rived mostly from grasping the principles, which 
brought out the facts stated in the Introduction, 
requiring the exercise of such valor, patience, and 
faithfulness to religious belief. Indeed, the Intro- 
duction and last chapter stand to each other as 
cause and effect. Without the principles under- 
lying the former, the statements of the latter could 
not have been predicated. 

The facts of the Introduction have been as con- 
cisely stated as it were possible to do, and conserve 
interesting and historical reading. They have been 
drawn mainly from the "Encyclopedia Britannica," 
the "Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia," the "McClin- 
tock and Strong's Cyclopedia," "Daubigne's 
History of The Reformation," "The Huguenots of 
the Reformed French Church," by William Henry 
Foote, D. D., and "The Huguenot Emigration to 
America," by Charles W. Baird, D. D., etc. 

As the reader goes through the book, he will 



viii PREFACE. 

likely be impressed with the painstaking labor, the 
amount of research, and the voluminous corre- 
spondence necessary for compiling such a work. 

With expressions of regret that his ministerial 
labors and his meagre means have prevented travel 
to sections of country where he might have ran- 
sacked old and musty records in state offices, where 
he feels sure other reliable data might be found, the 
author wishes to record his heartfelt appreciation 
of the assistance, which has been rendered him by 
many lineal descendants, and also by those con- 
nected with them, in the preparation of the book; 
and also to express the hope, that as time reveals 
other official and original documents, the whole 
matter of lineage will be taken up by some one, who 
shall succeed more fully, 

"To draw forth a noble ancestry, 
From the corruption of abusing time, 
Unto a lineal, true-derived course." 

B. H. DUPUY. 
Beverly, W. Va., Sept. 12, 1906. 



CONTENTS. IX 
INTRODUCTION. 

PAGE. 

The Rise and Progress of the Huguenots 1 

Origin of the term "Huguenot" 1 

The Rise of the French Reformers 3 

Reformation begins in France 4 

James Lef evre and William Farel 5 

William Briconnet 6 

Opposition, and scholars at Meaux scattered. 7 

Lefevre's Translation of the New Testament . 8 

Lefevre's Letter to Farel 8 

John Leclerc and his martyrdom 9 

Louis Berquin and his martyrdom 10 

Death of Louis XII., and Succession by Fran- 
cis I 12 

Influence of Francis I. on the Reformation . . 12 

Influence of Marguerite on the Reformation . . 13 

Reformers in the Royal Palace 14 

Marguerite's Influence Interdicted 16 

Status of Early French Reformers 17 

Persecution of Reformers under forms of Law. 18 

Manifestoes posted 19 

Expiation for the Sin of the Placards 20 

Six Martyrdoms in Paris 21 

Waldenses martyred « 22 

Death of Francis I., and Succession by Hen- 
ry II 22 

Renata; John Calvin; Clement Marot 23-25 

Edict of Chateaubriand 26 

Martyrdoms in Lyons 27 

First Reformed Church 28 

First Reformed National Synod 29 

Death of Henrv IL, and Succession by Fran- 
cis II ^ '. 30 

The Bourbon and Guise Families 30 

Antoine confers with Queen Mother 31 

Reformers designated "Huguenots" 32 

Second National Synod 32 

Assembly of Fontainbloau 33 

Death of Francis IL, Succession bv Charles 

IX., and Edict of July, 1561. . ! 34 



X CONTENTS. 

PAGE. 

'Conference of Poissy 35 

Edict of Toleration 38 

The Huguenot Wars 39 

The Conflict at Vassy 39 

First War and The Peace of Amboise 40 

Plot to Exterminate the Huguenots 41 

Second War and Treaty of Longjumeau 42 

Third War and Treaty of St. Germain-en- 

Laye 44, 45 

Marriages Proposed by the Queen Mother 46 

Death of Jean D'Albret 46 

Coligny shot 47 

Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day 48 

Coligny murdered 49 

Confession of Charles IX 51 

Fourth War and Peace concluded 52 

Politique Party and Fifth War 52-53 

Death of Charles IX., of Cardinal Lorraine, 

and Succession of Henry III 53, 54 

Peace of Beaulieu 54 

Holy League 55 

Sixth War, and Peace of Bergerac .55, 56 

Seventh War, and Peace of Flex 56 

Edict of Nemours 57 

Eighth War and Edict of Rouin 58 

Death of Catherine de Medici 59 

Henry III. assassinated 60 

Valois House ended 61 

Claimants of the throne 61 

Henry of Navarre crowned King, as Henry IV. 62 

Henry's Abjuration not sincere 62 

Edict of Nantes 63 

Meetings of the Reformed Synod 64 

From the Edict of Nantes to its Revocation .... 65 

The Career of Henry IV 65, 66 

Henry IV. assassinated 66 

Sully removed from office 67 

Edict sent to the Reformed Synod 69 

Marriage Contracts negotiated 70 

Italian Favorites in the Court 70 



CONTENTS. xi 

PAGE. 

Louis XIII. crowned King 71 

Louis XIII. marries Anne of Austria 71 

Luynes 72 

Queen Mother escaped from Prison 72 

Reconciliation of Louis XIII. and the Queen 

Mother 72 

Conquest of Beam 73 

War against the Huguenot Cities and Towns . 74 

Saumer and Towns in the South taken 75 

Luynes' Death and Second War 76 

Treaty of Montpellier and Richelieu 77 

Peace offered 78 

La Rochelle taken and Edict of Pardon 79 

Death of Richelieu and Succession by Mazarin 80 
Death of Louis XIII. and Succession by Louis 

XIV .' 80 

Meetings of Reformed Synod SO 

Spirit of Synod's last meeting 80 

Death of Mazarin and New Edicts 81 

The Edict of Nantes revoked 83 

Number of Refugees from France 84 

Financial Loss to France 84 

Addendum 85 



CHAPTER L 

Bartholomew Dupuy in History 86 

The Huguenots at the time of the Revocation of 

the Edict of Nantes 86 

The name Du Puy first appears in South 

France 87 

Meaning and probable origin of the name. ... 87 

Raphael Du Puy, Hugo Du Puy, etc 88 

Knight Hospitallers and Badge of Crusaders 89 

Shields of Dupuys in the Crusade 89 

Coats of Arms 90 

Progenitors of the Huguenot Dupuvs in the 

United States \ " 91 

Nicholas and Francis Dupuy in New York. . . 91 



xii CONTENTS. 

PAGE. 

Dr. John Dupuy in New York 92 

Francis Dupuy in King William's Parisli, Va.. 92 

Bartholomew Dupuy in France i . 92 

Entered army and was promoted Lieut, in 

King's Guard 93 

Retirement and Purchase of a home 93 

Marriage of Bartholomew Dupuy 94 

Protected by the King's Amnesty after the Re- 
vocation 95 

The Story of a Huguenot's Sword, A Relic 95 

A Meeting of Huguenots 97 

The Trial of Jacques De La Fontaine 101 

The Captain of Dragoons 104 

The Adversaries, Two Pistol Shots 110, 113 

The wounded Wolf 116 

The Fugitives, The Priest 120, 123 

The Advocate and the Tailor 125 

The Flight to the Frontier 128 

In Virginia 134 

Story of Sword confirmed 135 

Bartholomew Dupuy in America 136 

Four Fleets embark f rom England to America. 1S6 

King William's Parish 136 

Bartholomew Dupuy and Family in King Wil- 
liam's Parish 137 

Condition of Huguenots therein 137 

Entry of Land by Bartholomew Dupuy 138 

Activity in the church 139 

Death of Bartholomew Dupuy and his wife. .140 

The Old Sword 140 

The Sword lost 141 



CHAPTER II. 

Quotations from Documents 142 

The General List of French Protestants in 

King William's Parish 142 

The Register of Baptisms 143 

The Register of Deaths 147 



CONTENTS. xiii 

PAGE. 

A List of King William Parisli. — June 1744 . 148 
Deed of Bartholomew Dupuy to Peter Dupuy.148 
Deed of Bartholomew Dupuy to John Peter 

Bilbo 150 

Will of Martha Chastain 152 

Receipt of James Cocke 154 

Will of Bartholomew Dupuy 155 

Will of John James Dupuy 157 

Letter of Rev. John Dupuy of Kentucky 163 

Statement of Ebenezer Dupuy 167 

Statement of Mrs. Susanna (Trabue) Major. 167 

Deductions from Documents 169 

The Chastains ; Subletts ; Trabues ; Levilains . 169 

Francis Dupuy , . 170 

The Sons of Bartholomew Dupuy 170 

The Daughters of Bartholomew Dupuy 172 



CHAPTER III. 

Genealogy with brief Sketches 174 

Ancestry of Bartholomew Dupuy 174 

Importance of Family Records 177 

Bartholomew Dupuy and his Children 178 

Line of Peter^Dupuy 179 

Peter^ Dupuy, m. Judith Lefevre 179 

Jno. B.^Dupuy, m. Esther Guerrant 180 

James^Dupuy, m. Martha Man 182 

Peter^Dupuy, m. Elizabeth Malone 182 

Magdalene^Dupuy, m. Thomas Watkins .... 183 
Capt. Jno.^Dupuy, m. Mary W. Watkins . . . .184 

Capt. James^Dupuy, m. INIary Purnell 188 

Lieut. Peter^Dupuy, m. Margaret Martin . . .190 

Capt. William^Dupuy, m. 1st. Fuqua . . .192 

Capt. William^Dupuy, m. 2d. ]\frs. Peggy Lit- 

tlejohn ' \\\ 193 

Col. Jno. M.^Dupuy, m. 2d., Elizabeth Hall. .193 

Jesse^Dupuy, m. INF. A. Thompson 194' 

Benjamin'^Watkins, m. Susnn^Dupuy 194 

John^Watkins, m. Nancy Wilson 202 



xiv CONTENTS. 

PAGE. 

Stephen D.^Watkins, m. Sarah H.^Dupuy. . .204 
Ptolemy L.^Watkins, m. Harriet A.^Dupuy. .205 

Jno. B.^Dupuy, m. Henrietta L. Hunter 206 

Henry Guerrant^Dupuy, m. Sarah Taylor . .212 

Jane^Dupuy, m. Nicholas Edmunds 215 

Mary^Dupuy, m. Col. Wm. T. Walker 218 

Dr. Wm. T.^Walker, m. 1st. Susan J. Samp- 
son 219 

Dr. Wm. T.^Walker, m. 2d., Mrs. Fannia 

(Hollaway) Bayly 221 

Frances A.^Dupuy, m. John Daniel 221 

William Hunt^Dupuy, m. Agnes Payne Ware 222 

John^Dupuy, m. Ann B. Daniel 224 

Dr. Joel W.^Dupuy, m. Paulina P. Eldridge.225 

Mary P.^Dupuy, m. Robert Dickinson 228 

Asa^Dupuy, m. Emily Howe 231 

Dr. Wm. J.^Dupuy, m. Jane S. Ruffin 232 

Col. Joseph^Dupuy, m. Sarah W.^Walker . . .235 
James H.^Dupuy, m. Elizabeth G.^Dupuy ..236 
Elvira^Dupuy, m. Col. Richard B. Eggleston . 239 

Martha B.^Dupuy, m. Wm. McKinney 243 

Jane G.^Dupuy, m. Thomas McKinney 244 

Virginia A.^Dupuy, m. William W. Michie .244 
Moses F.^Dupuy, m. Phoebe Stephenson . . . .245 
Richard S.^Dupuy, m. 1st. Martha Waring . .246 
Richard S.^Dupuy, m. 2d. Cynthia Garland .248 
Albert G.^Dupuy, m. Anne B. Lee 249 

Line of Martha^ (Dupuy) Chastain 249 

Martha^ Dupuy, m. Stephen Chastain 249 

Mary M.^Chastain, m. James Cocke 250 

James'*Cocke, m. Mary Lewis 252 

William A.^Cocke, m. C'. M. Winston Ronald. 253 

Elizabeth R.^Cocke, m. Joseph Royall 254 

John F.^Cocke, m. Anne W. Ronald 255 

Mary^Cocke, m. Chas. W. L. Carter, M. D.. . .256 
Martha^Cocke, m. Valentine W. Southall . . .257 

Line of John James^ Dupuy 259 

John James^ Dupuy, m. Susanna Levilain . . .259 

Olympia^Dupuy, m. John J. Trabue 262 

James^Trabue, m. Jane E. Porter 266 



CONTENTS. XV 

PAGE. 

Jane^Trabue, m. Rev. Joseph Minter . . .269 

Nancy^Minter, m. Joseph Watkins 272 

Elizabeth-^Minter, in. James Major 273 

Jane^Minter, m. Benjamin Watkins 274 

Sarah^Minter, m. William H. Cosby 276 

William^Minter, m. Elizabeth G. Waggoner .277 

Martha^M inter, m. Peter Gregory 283 

William^Trabue, m. Elizabeth Haskins 284 

Mary^Trabue, m. Lewis Sublett 289 

William'' Sublett, m. Mrs. Nancy Saunders . .291 

Lewis^Sublett, m. Susan Coleman 292 

DaniePTrabue, m. Mary Haskins 297 

Martha^Trabue, m. Josiah Wooldridge 298 

Mary^Wooldridge, m. Joseph B. White 299 

Edward^Trabue, m. 1st. Martha Haskins 301 

Edward^Trabue, m. 2d. Jane E. Clay 303 

Nancy H.^Trabue, m. Asa Pittman 304 

George W.^Trabue, m. Mrs. Elizabeth Cham- 
bers 307 

Charles C.^Trabue, m. Agnes G. Woods 308 

Jane E.^Trabue, m. John W. Lewellen 310 

Cynthia A.^Trabue, m. Taylor Jones 314 

Matilda O.^Trabue, m. Amos Sutton 315 

Prince E.^Trabue, m. Lydia Neville 317 

Stephen^Trabue, m. Jane Haskins 318 

Haskins D.^Trabue, m. Olympia^Willson ...320 

Aaron^Trabue, m, 1st. Martha^Trabue 323 

Aaron^Trabue, m. 2d. Martha Cheatham 324 

Elizabeth^Trabue, m. Fenelon R. Willson . . .324 
Rev. John S.^Willson, m. Martha Waggener.324 

Susanna^Trabue, m. Thomas Major 329 

Olive T.^Major, m. Nancy Gunnell 329 

Elizabeth R.*Major, m. John T. Gunnell 331 

Judith^Trabue, m. John Major 334 

Bartholomew^Dupuy, m. Mary Mottley . . . .335 

Martha^Dupuy, m. Col. Abram Owen 337 

Elizabeth^Owen, m. Daniel Brannin 339 

Joseph^Dupuy, m. Nancy Peay 342 

Judith C.^Dupuy, m. Edward C. Drane 345 

Augustine^Dupuy, m. Lucy J. Thomas 346 



xvi CONTENTS. 

PAGE. 

Sallie^Dupuy, m. Poindexter Thomasson . . . 347 

Eev. John-Dupuy, m. Elizabeth Minter 351 

SamuePDupuy, m. Mary Anne Fawcett .... 355 

Rev. James^Dupuy, m. Anne Starke 357 

Line of Philippa^ (Dupuy) Levilain 360 

Philippa^Dupuy, m. John Levilain 360 

Elizabeth^Levilain, m. Eev. Matthew Wood- 
son 361 

Marj'^ Woodson, m. Dr. James W. Moss . . . .365 
Sophia^Woodson, m. 1st. Wm. Hickman . . . .369 

Sophia^Woodson, m. 2d. Mr. Lamb 370 

Robert S.-^Woodson, m. Hulda Young 371 

Blank Pages for continuation of Genealogy . 374 

CHAPTER IV. 

The Honorable Posterity 377 

Pride of Ancestry is not Vanity 377 

What America owes to the Huguenots 378 

Dispersion of Descendants 378 

Descendants in American Wars 380 

Social Standing of Descendants 381 

Education of Descendants 381 

Avocations and Religion of Descendants . . . .382 

The Heritage of Descendants 383 

Descendants should follow example of Ances- 
tors 386 

Descendants should prepare offspring for 

Heritage 388 

The Potent Duty of Living Descendants .... 389 

Appendix 390 

Descendants of Dr. John^ Dupuy of New York 

City '. 391 

Daniel^Dupuy, m. Mrs. Eleanor Dylander . .392 
John^Dupuy, m. Mary Richard Haskins . . . .393 
Charles Meredith^ Dupuy, m. Ellen Maria 
Reynolds 394 

Ancestry of Mr. George A. Dupuy 394 

Joseph^Dupuy, m. Rebecca Nichols 395 

Ancestry of Mr. J. D. Dupuy .395 



INTRODUCTION. 



THE RISE AND PROGRESS OF THE HUGUENOTS. 
Origin of the Term " Huguenot. 

The term ''Huguenot^' was originallj a introd. 
designation given about the middle of the six- 
teenth century to the Reformed or Calvinist, 
of France. The origin of the word is involved 
in great obscurity. 

Prof. Mahn, the distinguished German phi- 
lologist, of Berlin, has given no less than 
fifteen explanations of its supposed derivation. 
The three most plausible need only be men- 
tioned. It has been derived from a faulty pro- 
nunciation of the German Eidgenossen (' ' con- 
federates ''), who were called Eignots^ a term 
applied to the patriotic party of Geneva, who First 
maintained themselves in connection with^^^^°^" 
French Protestants agamst the tyrannical at- 
tempts of Charles III., Duke of Savoy. This 
was a favorite explanation of the origin of the 
word with those writers, who represented 
the Huguenots as secret conspirators against 
the crown. 

The objections to such a derivation are the 
difficulties of accounting for the transfer of 
the name from Switzerland to France, the 
lapse of time before it arose in the latter 
country and the preference given by Beza, 



2 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. in his history emanating from Geneva, for 

another derivation. 
Second A less plaiisible explanation is that offered 
^Yum^^y some of the Eeformed themselves, who de- 
rive it from the part which the French Protes- 
tants took in sustaining Henry IV., the de- 
scendant ol Hiigues Capet, to the throne of 
France, as against the pretensions of the 
Guises, who claimed to have descended from 
Charlemagne. Against this explanation are 
the facts that the Reformed of France were 
called Huguenots some forty years before that 
time, and the concession that the word was 
certainly in its origin a term of reproach, the 
application of which was resented and that 
the king was petitioned to forbid its use. 
Best The most plausible explanation of its origin 
^^Jj^^'is that given by Etienne Pasquier, an eminent 
lawyer and litterateur, of France, in one of 
whose letters the word first occurs; and also 
that advanced by the learned Prof. Mahn, of 
Berlin, whose explanations are alike as to the 
mode of the origin of the word. These two 
writers may be regarded as our best authori- 
ties. Pasquier holds that the term arose in 
Tours from the name Huguon, a superstitious 
Pas- fellow who used to roam the streets of the city 
"Tnd'^ at night; and Prof. Mahn, that it was derived 
Mahn's from Hughties^ the name of some heretic. As 
Erpiana-j^he early French Protestants dared not to 
meet save under the cover of night, and as the 
term was originally an appellation of reproach, 
how natural it would seem to affix to one or 
the other of these words (as Prof. Mahn sug- 
gests), the French diminutive ot, and for 
Roman Catholics to call them " Huguenots. " 
In favor of this explanation is the additional 
affirmation of Pasquier, that he heard the term 



ORIGIN OF TERM HUGUENOT. 3 

applied to the Protestants by friends of his in introd. 
Tours, eight or nine years before the tumult 
(1560) in Amboise, where they were first dis- 
tinctively called Huguenots. Taken all in all, 
this explanation best coincides with the cir- 
cumstances and requisites of the rise of the 
term. 

As far as the purpose of this volume is con- 
cerned, it will suffice to refer to the Rise and 
Progress of the Huguenots, under the follow- 
ing heads and as concisely as possible. I. The 
Rise of the French Reformers (1512-33). 
II. Their Endurance of Persecution under 
forms of law, until their religion was recog- 
nized (1534-62). in. The Huguenot Wars to 
maintain their rights and to secure full tolera- 
tion, which was granted them in the Edict of 
Nantes (1562-98). IV. Their Struggles from 
the Edict of Nantes to its Revocation (1598- 
1685). 

I. 

TKe Rise oi tlie Frencli Reiormers (1512-33). 

The seeds of Gospel Truth, which pro- Rise of 
duced the great Reformation of the sixteenth ^^^°™- 
century, were first sown and germinated in 
French soil. Before Martin Luther loomed up 
before the world in Germany, and before the 
burning desire for sacred learning had kindled 
in the heart of Zwingle in Switzerland, the 
great and vital truths from which the Refor- 
mation sprung had begun to fall in France. 
Indeed, history proves that the French, 
German, and Swiss Reformations, though aris- 
ing about the same time, w^ere in their incipi- 
ency independent of and without any com- 
munication one with the other. After each of 



4 KISE AND PKOGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. the foundations — the three corner-stones as it 
were — of the Reformation had been separately 
and independently laid in each country, and 
the fabric had begun to rise from those three 
points of labor, then the news circulating 
between the separate bands of workers began 
to animate and to accelerate the progress of 
each, until the walls were joined and the 
structure completed stood imposingly before 
the eyes of the world. The workmen who sep- 
arately laid the foundations and finally com- 
pleted the structure in unison, were French, 
German, and Swiss; and Martin Luther was 
the greatest of them all, and became their 
foreman. But that the work first began in 
France there is no question. 

Reforma- The sccds of the Reformation were not a 
Be^^ns f<^i'6ign importation to her soil, but there the 

in France, first sower of any country began to scatter 
the first seeds, and there they first germinated. 
And the reason for it was that no other 
country had been so long and so well prepared 
for the change, though the Reformation there 
met with the bitterest opposition, and was 
longer obtaining legal toleration. In no other 
country did it occasion more bloodshed and 
awful civil wars, and did state administration, 
court intrigue, partisan politics, and desire 
for reputation, exercise greater influence 
against its progress and fortunes. The begin- 
ning of its rise there was also different from 
that in Germany, where it began in a small 
city. In France it began at the most influ- 
ential center of the whole country — in its very 
metropolis and in the great University of 
Paris, the second institution in authority in 
all Roman Christendom. In that institution, 
the seeds of the Reformation were first sown, 



KISE OF FRENCH REFORMERS. 5 

by a Picard, who was soon afterwards assisted introd. 
by a Dauphinese, in scattering them over the 
country. The Picard was James Lef evre, born james 
of humble parentage at Etaples, Picardy, ^efevre. 
about 1450, and educated in mathematics, 
philosophy, and theology at the University, 
and in Greek under Hermonymus of Sparta, 
in Paris, and in the writings of Aristotle in 
Florence, Rome, and Venice. The Dauphinese 
was William Farel, born near Gap in Dau- wiiiiam 
phiny, 1489, and also educated at the same ^^^^^• 
University of Paris. As early as 1493, James 
Lefevre, then doctor of divinity, was Pro- 
fessor of Theology in the University, teaching 
the language of the New Testament in the 
course of his theological instructions. Among 
all his colleagues, for amiability, candor, piety, 
intellect and learning, he ranked among the 
first. It was in 1512, under the reign of Louis james 
XII., that this eminent scholar published the ^®^®y^® 
first edition of his Latin Commentary on theooctrines 
Epistles of Paul, which clearly enunciated the of 
insufficiency of works to save the soul, and the ^ion. " 
doctrine of justification by faith in Christ, as 1512. 
the sinner's only hope; and taught it to the 
great number of disciples from every country 
who sat at his feet. That was five years before 
Martin Luther posted his theses on the doors 
of the Cathedral at Wittenberg, and was really 
the first shoot of the Reformation to spring 
up in any country. James Lefevre, therefore, 
well deserves the name of forerunner of the 
Reformation, an honor attributed to him by 
Theodore Beza, who hails him as the man, 
''who boldly began the revival of the pure 
religion of Jesus Christ." It was a strange 
doctrine for the age, and especially to be heard 
first in the great University of Paris, and 



6 KISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. whose import was to overthrow the subtleties 
of the Schoolmen and observancies of popery. 
Indeed, it must have been strange sounds 
reverberating through the halls of the Uni- 
versity, when Lefevre taught that, ''It is God 
alone who gives righteousness through faith, 
who by grace alone justifies unto eternal 
life'^; the doctrine which contradicted the 
teachings of four centuries, and gave rise to 
the Reformed religion. 
Farei Amoug the pupils of Lefevre at that time 
becomes a-^g^g William Farcl, who listened earnestly to 
former, the doctriue and for whom it had an inde- 
scribable charm. He embraced the doctrine 
at once with all the ardor of his soul, and his 
conversion to it was as prompt and decisive 
as that of Paul. He then began to study 
Greek and Hebrew, and to read the Scriptures 
earnestly and constantly, when greater light 
dawned upon him. He consecrated the labors 
of his life to the great cause of the Reforma- 
tion, and his courage, influence and power 
Farei became wide and irresistible. He was com- 
trVm Polled to flee from France in 1523, when he 
France, retired to Switzerland. Beza says of Farei 
that, "Undismayed by difficulties, threats, 
abuse, or blows, he won over to Jesus Christ 
Montbelliard, Neufchatel, Lausanne, Aigle 
and finally Geneva." 

But Farei was not the only pupil who 

yielded to the teaching of Lefevre, the great 

theologian from Etaples. In the University 

he trained other scholars who were to enlist in 

the cause. 

wm. William Briconnet, born in Paris 1470, was 

^JJ^^°g^*another. He was a man of considerable learn- 

Reformering, of a fouduess for the subtleties of refined 

mysticism, and of a kind and gentle temper. 



EISE OF FRENCH REFORMEES. 7 

In 1516, lie was appointed Bishop of Meaux, introd. 
an important town twenty-eight miles east of 7^. 
Paris. Impressed with the low state of piety 
among the clergy, and imbued with the teach- 
ing of Lef evre, Briconnet determined to bring 
about a reform in the ministry of his diocese. 
Accordingly, he demanded of the clergy 
greater faithfulness to pastoral duties, for- 
bade their habit of spending time in pleasure 
at the capital, and prohibited the Franciscan 
monks from entering the pulpits of his diocese. 
In 1521, when opposition arose in the faculty Opposi- 
of the University at Paris to the Eeformed *^°°* 
teaching, Briconnet, wishing to train up a 
pure ministry for his churches, invited and 
gathered about him quite a group of scholars, 
including Lef evre, Farel, Martin Mazurier, Scholars 
Gerard feoussel and others, by whom the Me^aux 
gospel was preached with much fervor for two 
years in the churches of his diocese, which re- 
sulted in the forming of a Protestant colony at 
Meaux. In 1523, when strenuous opposition 
was brought to bear by the faculty of the Uni- 
versity against the movement, which scattered 1523. 
the scholars, Farel, before refugeing to Switz- ^^g^^^^f/^ 
erland, went to the southeast border of the tered. 
country, where he labored for a time with ^^^^ ^° 
great activity, and contributed to the spread south- 
of the Reformation in the provinces of the east. 
Saone, of the Rhone and of the Alps. It was 
in 1523, that Briconnet made Lef evre his vicar- 
general, and also responded to the Monks who 
waited on him and insisted that he, ''CiTish 
this heresy, or else the pestilence, which is 
already desolating the city of Meaux, will 
spread over the whole kingdom. '^ 

But instead of doing it, he went into the 
pulpit and justified the teaching of Lef evre, 



8 KISE AND PEOGKESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. and called the Monks pliarisees and hypo- 
crites. It was in the same year, that Le- 

Lefevre f evre 's Translation from the Vulgate of the 

transiates;^g^ Testament appeared in French — a work 
Testa- which he had begun before going to Meaux, at 

mentintothe requcst of Queen Marguerite. The Book 
^^°^ ' was intended for common readers, and copies 
of it were eagerly sought and widely circu- 
lated. Where the poor were unable to pay the 
price demanded for them, they were gratui- 
tously supplied. Briconnet introduced them 
into the churches of Meaux, and the people 
heard the Word of God in their own language 
and were glad. The next year, Lefevre ad- 
dressed a letter to his ref ugeed friend, William 
Farel, in which he pictured the immediate re- 
sults of the i3ublication, and his glowing hopes 
1524- of the Eeformation. The letter is dated, 

i'eu7/to'*'^^®^^^' July 6, 1524,'^ and is as follows: 
Farel. "Good God, with what joy do I exult when I 
perceive that the grace of the pure knowledge 
of Christ has already spread over a good part 
of Europe ; and I hope that Christ is at length 
about to visit our France with his benediction. 
You can scarcely imagine with what ardor 
God is moving the minds of the simple in some 
places to embrace his Word since the books of 
the New Testament have been published in 
French; but you will justly lament that they 
have not been more widely scattered among 
the people. Some enemies have endeavored, 
under cover of the authority of Parliament, 
to hinder the work; but our most generous 
King has become in this matter the defender 
of the cause of Christ, declaring it to be his 
will that his kingdom shall hear the Word of 
God without impediment in that tongue which 
it understands. Now throughout our entire 



RISE OF FRENCH REFORMERS. 9 

diocese, on feast dsijs, and especially on introd. 
Sunday, both the Epistle and the Gospel are 
read to the people in their native tongue, and 
the parish priest adds a word of exhortation 
to the Epistle or Gospel, or both at his own 
discretion/^ That French edition, with Le- 
fevre's similar Translation of the Old Testa- 
ment in 1528, subsequently became the basis 
of the Translation of Peter Robert Olivetan, 
which proved so important in the history of 
the progress of Protestantism in France. 

"Whien the members of the Protestant colony 
at Meaux saw their evangelical teachers dis- 
persed in 1523, they began to edify and to 
strengthen one another. Among them was a 
common wool-carder named John Leclerc. He John 
had been instructed in the reformed doctrines ^^<^^"^- 
by the teachers personally, and by their tracts, 
and had himself read the Word of God in his 
own language from Lefevre's Translation of 
the New Testament. Being a man of great 
courage and filled with the Spirit of God, he 
at once in his humble way took up the work, 
and signalized himself for zeal and facility, in 
expounding the Scriptures. 

The church at Meaux came soon to regard 
him as its minister. He was active in visiting 
the people, and in confirming the disciples. 
But not satisfied with such ordinary cares, his 
unguarded zeal led him to proclaim against 
the Antichrist of Rome, and to post his "plac- 
ards" on the gates of the Cathedral. The 
act was a great surprise to the faithful, and 
a great exasperation to the priests, who 
wondered how a common wool-comber could 
thus measure himself with the pope. The 
Franciscans were outrageous, and demanded 
that a terrible example be made of him. 



10 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd . Hence he was thrown into prison, soon tried, 
and being condemned, was whipped three 
days on his bare back through the streets of 
the city, and then branded on his forehead 
with a hot iron as a heretic. After the execu- 
tion, he was set at liberty; and leaving Meaux 
for Rosay in Brie, he subsequently landed at 
Metz in Lorraine, which was steadily and 
quietly becoming a center of the Reformed. 
There he instructed the people of his own con- 
dition, but his same imprudent zeal caused 
him secretly to break the images of the Virgin, 
and of the most celebrated saints of the 
country, the night before the people were to 
worship them and obtain the pardon of their 
sins, in the chapel out from town, where they 
were preserved. For this act, he was appre- 

Lecierc hended, condemned, and put to a most cruel 

tyred ^^^ diabolical death, and became the first 
martyr of the French Reformation. 

The next man to be mentioned who espoused 
the Reformed Religion, about 1523, was a 

1523- nobleman of the French Court, Louis Berquin, 
Berquin, ^^^^ about thirty years of age. He was pure 
in morals, open in disposition, charitable to 
the poor, of profound knowledge (entitled 
"the most learned of the nobles"), and of un- 
bounded attachment to his friends. The fa- 
naticism, bickering, tyranny, and persecution, 
which had begun to arise against the Re- 
formers, and his innate opposition to injustice 
kindled in the heart of Berquin, the desire to 
know that Holy Bible, which was so dear to 
the Reformed, and which caused them to 
endure so much for the sake of their faith. He 
had scarcely begun to read the Book before it 
won his heart. As he was not a man who did 
things by halves, he immediately joined Le- 



EISE OF FKENCH KEFOEMERS. 11 

fevre, Briconnet and all those who loved the introd. 
Word, and in fellowshipping with them, ex- 
perienced the purest joys. So anxious was he 
to pour floods of truth over all his countrymen, 
that he immediately began to write and trans- 
late Christian books into French. Living 
alternately in Paris and in the provinces, he 
collected together many of the works of the 
Protestants, and translated the writings of 
Luther; and himself composed controversial 
works in which he defended and propagated 
the new doctrines. His study in Paris was to 
the votaries of Rome like a book-seller ^s shop, 
in which he was translator, corrector, printer 
and book-seller. Three times his collections 
and writings were condemned to be burned, 
and he was cast into prison. On the fii^st two 
occasions, 1523, 1526, he was liberated, and his 
friends advised him after his second libera- 
tion to leave the country, or at least to keep 
silent ; but he considered that to be against his 
conscience. The third time when he was im- 
prisoned, March, 1529, he was sentenced to be Berquin 
burned alive, and the sentence was executed, ™^^^ 
April 22, 1529 : he being the second Protestant ^5^29.* 
martyr. 

By this time, Lefevre's French Testament 
was being circulated by the thousands 
throughout France by peddlers from Switzer- 
land, where copies were printed by Farel and 
Treatises of French Protestants were being 
printed in Latin, French, and Italian, at Ham- 
burg, Germany, and conveyed to France by 
ships on the sea; and already since 1524 there 
had been existing at Basle, a Bible Society, a 
Tract Society and an Association of Colpor- 
teurs, for the benefit of the Reformed of 



12 EISE AND PROGKESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd . France. The country was being flooded with 
literature of the Reformers. 

We will consider next the royal influence 

which aided the Rise of the Reformation. 

Louis Louis XII., who was reigning when Lefevre's 

^jgf"jg Commentary of Paul's Epistles appeared, died 
less than three years afterwards, January 1, 
1515; and Francis I. (son of Charles of Orle- 
ans, and son-in-law of the King by marriage to 
his daughter, Claude, in 1514), succeeded him 

Francis I. to the thronc. The friendship of Francis I. to 
King. ^Q sciences, and his attachment and gener- 
osity to learned men induced many persons of 
genius, who were favorable to the Reforma- 
tion to take up their residence in France; and 
the writings of the Protestants being gener- 
ally better compositions than those of the 
papists were introduced extensively through- 
out the country and eagerly read. 

Influence This patronage which Francis gave to learn- 

FrancisL^^S uot ouly causcd France to pass from the 
on the middle ages to modern times, but also con- 

^^^^'^^"tributed to aid and inspire the Reformers. 
He prepared the way for the truths of 
the Reformation to root and spring up by 
founding Hebrew and Greek professorships. 
Hence Theodore Beza, in placing his portrait 
at the head of the Reformers, says: *' Pious 
spectator! do not shudder at the sight of 
this adversary! Ought he not to have a 
part in this honor, who expelled barba- 
rism from the world, and with firm hand 
substituted in its stead three languages and 
sound learning, to be as it were the portals 
to the new building that was shortly to be 
1521. erected?'' In 1521 when the deputies of the 
Sorbonne waited upon Francis to remonstrate 
against the Reformers, as heretics, he re- 



RISE OF FRENCH REFORMERS. 13 

spondecl: "I will not have these people mo- introd. 
lested. To persecute those who teach us, 
would prevent able scholars from coming into 
the country.'' On two occasions, when the 
faculty of the University took action against 
certain evangelical truths in the writings of 
Lefevre, he rescued him from persecution. It 
was probably in 1523 that the writings of the 1523. 
Reformers were introduced, and held a place 
among the beautiful bound books of Francis' 
Court, as works of literarv merit. He liberated 
Berquin from prison, and in 1526 he recalled 
the scholars, who had refugeed from France. 
Francis, however, made no pretensions to re- 
ligion, but only used it as a means for ad- 
vancing his royal interests, and so it was that 
many of his acts encouraged the evangelicans. 
As long as the new religion conduced to his 
popularity, as a man of letters, and was not 
detrimental to his reign over the masses, he 
would not allow it to be interfered with, 
though it were antagonistic to the Established 
Roman Catholic Church. Religion with him 
was only a policy. 

But with his sister, Marguerite of Angou- influence 
lene, it was quite different. Reared with gueriu' 
Francis at the Court of Louis XII., she shared 
the attention of his able tutors who prepared 
him for the throne; and while his education 
made him only a patron of letters, it made 
her in addition a friend of the Reformers. 
She was one of the first to become an ardent 
believer in, and a convert to the doctrine of 
justification by faith alone. She was a lovely Margue- 
woman: — captivating in manners, amiable in '^^^, 
disposition, pure in morals and moved in acter. 
the midst of her brother's licentious court 
like an angel of light. As a King's daughter; 



14 EISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. a Ejng^s sister; a King's wife (first, of Duke 
"diaries of Alencon, and second of Henry 
of Albret, King of Navarre) ; as a patroness 
of literature; with accomplishments of form 
and manners; as the solitary ro^yal believer 
of the faith in Christ that alone saves the 
soul; maintaining that faith in her varied 
positions; asserting her royal birth and 
privileges; rejecting whatever she thought 
opposed to a heavenly life; and whose ruling 
passion was to do good and prevent evil, 
she was evidently the most lovely woman 
of the age, and may be classed among the 
remarkable persons of the Reformation in all 
Europe. 

For her brother Francis, she cherished 
the tenderest affection, and held in return 
a firm hold on his heart. During his early 
reign, he took kindly her efforts to convert 
him to the new religion. But his disinclina- 
tion to any religion, and specially to the pure 
life required by the Gospel, prevented his 
acceptance. He, however, did not at first ob- 
ject to her entertainment of, and association 
with the Reformers, and her support of their 

Royal doctrines. Hence high-bred noblemen among 
^^^^™gthe Reformers were close associates of the 

Palace. Duchess of Alcucou and the Queen of Navarre, 
and often conversed with her on the doctrines 
of the Reformation. Among them were Le- 
fevre, Farel, Briconnet, Roussel and Berquin. 
They lent her their writings and tracts, and 
spoke personally with her of the pure Word of 
God, of worshipping in spirit and in truth, of 
christian liberty which shakes off the yoke of 
superstition and the traditions of men to bind 
them closer to God alone. But of all the 
Reformers, it was Bishop Briconnet, whose 



EISE OF FRENCH REFORMERS. 15 

friendsMp she particularly enjoyed, and who introd. 
became her spiritual guide. At the time of 
the retirement of the scholars from Paris to 
Meaux; the going forth of her husband to 
war; and the departure of her youthful aunt, 
Philiberta, to Savoy, she was made to feel 
very lonely and deserted. She turned to Bri- 
connet for consolation, and the letters which 
passed between them were exceedingly touch- 
ing. It was about a year later that the Bishop 
sent her a copy of the Epistles of Paul, trans- 
lated and splendidly illuminated, as a present 
to her brother Francis, and thus commended 
them: "They are a royal dish, fattening with- 
out corruption, and healing all manner of 
sickness. The more we taste them, the more 
we hunger after them with desire unsatiable, 
and that never cloys. " Later on when Francis 
recalled the fugitive scholars, Roussel became 
her court preacher, and in that position faith- 
fully preached the evangelical doctrines; and 
on her marriage to the King of Navarre, in 
1527, he became her confessor. Three years 
later she made him abbot of Clairac, and in 
1533, she invited him to preach in the Louvre, 
which he did amid great popular agitation, 
when many Romans were expelled from the 
city. It was also in 1533 that Marguerite 
published at Alencon, her volume of poetry 1533- 
entitled, "The Mirror of the Sinful SouF'; iii^Sir 
which true religion is summed up in "Man's Poem, 
sin and God's grace — that what man needs is 
to have his sins remitted and wholly pardoned 
in consequence of Christ's death; and when by 
faith he has found assurance of this pardon, he 
enjoys peace." The work was considered by 
the Sorbonne as a clear and complete proof 
that she was a heretic. In Lefevre's old age, 



16 EISE AND PEOGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. when he was about seventy-five, she invited 
him to retire to Nerac, her residence, where he 
spent the remnant of his days, often in her 

Lefevre's presence, and sitting at her royal table. There 
^i^se!' ^^ ^^^^' lion^e he died about 1536. She became 
the refuge and defender of the Reformers. 
Thus we gather the influence of this remarka- 
ble woman on the Rise of the Reformation in 

Margue- France. But as the storms political and ec- 

influence clcsiastical began to hover over the country, 
inter- her influence was interdicted. The cry was 
dieted, iieard with great surprise that ''Even the 
sister of the King takes part with these 
people. ^^ She was denounced to Francis, but 
the King who was tenderly attached to her 
pretended to think the cry untrue. Finally 
Francis, prompted by the Bishops of the papa- 
cy, sent for his sister, and rebuked her for 
suffering these innovations to take place. She 
promised not to go any further in the matter, 
provided the following concessions were 
granted her: "1st. That no mass should be 
said unless there were persons to receive the 
eucharist. 2d. That the elevation of the host 
should cease. 3d. The worship of it also. 4th. 
That the eucharist should be administered m 
both kinds. 5th. That in the mass, there 
should be no mention made of Mary and the 
saints. 6th. That common, ordinary bread 
should be taken, broken, and distributed. And 
7th. That the priests should not be compelled 
to a life of celibacy." But these propositions, 
which go to show the belief of her heart, were 
rejected; and the preachers, she had brought 
with her to Paris, being thrown into prison, 
were with great difficulty at her intercession 
set at liberty. At last the King was forced by 
the papacy to strictly command his sister to 



RISE OF FRENCH REFORMERS. 17 

avoid all innovations in religious matters, introd. 

By this time, the doctrines of the Ref- 1533. 
ormation had been widely scattered and 
thoroughly rooted in France. Springing up 
first in the city of Paris, whence students of 
the University scattered them generally over 
the country, they found a lodgment first at 
Meaux in the organization of a colony, and 
were then carried to the Southeast, and be- 
came so deeply rooted in many places, that 
Rome with all her persecutions has never suc- 
ceeded in uprooting them. 

It is proper to state that all the above men- status of 
tioned advocates of the Reformation were not jfefona- 
out-and-out Reformers, like Luther, Calvin ers. 
and Zwingle; i. e., all of them did not break 
with Rome, and boldly attack its doctrines. 
Some of them remained in the Roman Catholic 
Church, and tried to occupy a middle ground, 
and hence when persecution faced them, they 
either recanted, as did Briconnet and Mazu- 
rier, or kept silent, as did Maguerite, the 
Queen of Navarre. Lefevre, being of that na- 
ture which unfitted him for strife, led rather 
the quiet life of an instructor, and while all his 
affinities were with the reformers and he 
aided them with his pen, and occasionally in 
public guarded discourses, he still remained 
in the church of Rome. But in his very last 
days, it was his deepest, even most pitiful 
sorrow, expressed in sobs of tears, that he had 
not shown to the world his true colors, and 
been in the forefront of the battle. Roussel 
also held an intermediate position, but so con- 
ducted his public life and utterances as to 
narrowly escape persecution. But with Parel, 
Leclerc and Berquin it was quite different. 
They gave no uncertain sounds, but boldly as- 



18 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

i ntrod . serted their belief and contended for the 
doctrines of the Reformation to the last. 
Hence Farel had to flee the country, and the 
other two were martyred. In France the Rise 
of the Reformation had no leader, as it had in 
Germany in Martin Luther, who was suf- 
ficiently supported by the civil power to make 
him bold, aggressive, and antagonistic to 
Rome. The whole civil and ecclesiastical 
power in France was arrayed against the 
movement, and it was not possible for any one 
person to have maintained its leadership: 
death would have been his inevitable fate. 
Hence its doctrines had to work silently like 
leaven, diffusing themselves in the hearts of 
the people secretly, until a firm and perma- 
nent belief was established, sufficient to main- 
tain itself; which was effected in about twenty 
3^ears from its first promulgation by James 
Lefevre. 

II. 

The Persecution of the Reformers under the forms of 
law, until their religion was recognized, (1534-62}. 

Persecu- Persecution began against the Reformers as 
Re°fora- 6arly as 1521, but it was not until the year 
ers. 1534 that it became active and of organized 
1534. form. In the summer of that year, the pious 
Protestants of Paris began to discuss among 
themselves the perils of their condition, and 
whether it were wiser to attempt to reform 
the Romish church, or to organize a new one. 
To decide the question, they despatched a mes- 
senger to Switzerland to consult Farel and the 
Mani- other refugees. The advice of the refugees 
festo. was that a " Manifesto, ^^ in the form of plac- 
ards and pamphlets, should be secretly posted 



PERSECUTION OF EEFOEMERS. 19 

and circulated througliout Fi*Unce, in the hope introa. 
of arousing thereby vigorous action among the 
Protestants, and of inducing the King to re- 
form the Romish church. Farel himself, in 
his characteristic, vehement language, wrote 
the *' Manifesto,^' censuring the errors of the 
Romish church and especially the Mass, which 
was the safeguard of Rome, and the abomina- 
tion of the Reformed. The messenger re- 
turned with a supply of them in both forms. 
The design did not meet with universal 
approval among the Protestants, for some 
thought it harsh and would lead to severe con- 
sequences. However, after prolonged deliber- 1534. 
ation, they decided to execute it, and the night ^^^^ 
of October 23, 1534, was fixed for posting the posted, 
placards. 

On the morning of the 24tli, the Catholics 
found the paper posted throughout the city 
of Paris and elsewhere, and even the King, 
who was at Blois, found one affixed to the door 
of his own room. The effect though electric 
and astounding did not result as was hoped, 
for while it electrified the Reformers, it 
aroused the Romanists to violence. So numer- 
ous were the Reformers at this time, if they 
had had a leader to organize them, they might 
have won the day by forcing Francis I. to 
conciliate and establish his kingdom in their 
hearts. But the undisciplined and unorgan- 
ized Reformers without a leader were left to 
contend with the disciplined and organized 
Romanist in church and state, with the King 
at their head. The Romanist proclaimed that 
a plot was forming to destroy the kingdom 
and religion; and the King incensed that his 
own door had been placarded, declared the act 
high treason and ordered: "Let all be seized 



20 KISE AND PEOGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 



If 



i ntrod . without distinction who are suspected of Lu 
theresy; I will exterminate them all 
Seizures, trials, and condemnations immedi- 
ately began, which were followed with burn- 
ings on November 13^ and continued at inter- 
vals. The Reformers of all ranks, who were 
likely of suspicion even, sought refuge in exile, 
for there was no safety for them in their native 
1535. land. Finally, the 25th of January, 1535, was 
^Son' appointed as a day of expiation for the sin 
for Sin oiof //le placards. On that day Paris was in 
Placards. gj.g^^ excitement, with crowds filling the 
streets. An immense procession paraded 
through the city, the van of which consisted of 
those who bore crosses from the parishes ; next 
came the citizens in double file, bearing each a 
torch; then the four begging orders with the 
priests and canons of the city, bearing all 
manner of Romish relics; then a great number 
of the Cardinals, Archbishops, Bishops and 
Abbots ; then a canopy borne by the three sons 
of Francis I. and the Duke of Vendome, under 
which was the Host for the sacrament of Mass, 
borne by the. Bishop of Paris; then came 
Francis himself, walking and bareheaded, 
bearing a lighted taper, as a penitent ; and then 
came the Queen, princes, and princesses, for- 
eign embassadors, the Court, the Chancellor of 
France, the Council, the Parliament enrobed 
in scarlet, the University and other corpora- 
tions, and last the Guard: all bearing a taper 
in profound silence. The procession halted at 
principal places to repose for a few moments 
the Host on temporary altars, before one of 
which Francis, with all who desired to follow 
his example, knelt and humbled himself for 
the sin of the placards. So great were the 
crowds, that officers could with difficulty keep 



PERSECUTION OF REFORMERS. 21 

a passage clear for the procession. It finally introd. 
halted at the Church of Notre Dame, where 
the Host was placed on the altar, and the 
Bishop of Paris said Mass as atonement for 
past insults. After that, a sumptuous dinner 
was served the King and princes at the 
Bishop ^s palace; and that ended, the nobles 
and prominent persons repaired to the 
bishop's great hall to hear a speech from the 
King. He pathetically lamented the harm 
done to religion in the placards, and urged all 
to unite in the support of the Romish church, 
and declared: "I warn you that I will have 
the said errors expelled and driven from my 
kingdom, I will excuse no one. As I am your 
King, if I knew one of my limbs infected with 
this rottenness, I would give it you to cut off. 
And if I saw one of my children defiled by it, 
I would not spare him. I would deliver him 
up myself, and sacrifice him to God." At the 
close of his speech, he was approached and 
thanked for his zeal by two representatives, 
who kneeled before him, one on the part of the 
Roman clergy, and the other in behalf of the 
Roman people. The response of the audience 
was, "We will live and die for the Catholic 
religion." The procession with the King and 
nobles then formed again and proceeded to 
two points in the city, where victims were held 
to be burnt alive, that the wrath of God might 
be appeased. At each place, three brave and 
respected Reformers were separately exe- six 
cuted, by letting each down into the flames ^|J^/" 
and lifting him out of them, a number of times, in Pans, 
by means of a strappado, until the rope which 
bound his hands to it was burned, and he then 
fell into the hot coals of fire : an awful death 
in preference to abjuring his religion which 



22 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd . was offered to each. In other parts of France 

1545- similar executions were made, which exhibited 

the fiendish spirit of men glorying in the 

torments of their fellow-men, and also the 

triumph of devout faith over death. 

From this time forth, Francis I. strove to be 
absolute Monarch of both church and state, 
and legislation became more systematically 
severe. Only two other martyrdoms need be 
mentioned which occurred during his reign. 

1545. In 1545 the Waldenses, living on the river 
^gg^g®°' Durance in Southeast France, were horribly 

Mar- massacred by an armed expedition fitted out 
tyred. ^^ ^-^^ with the couscut of the King. Twenty- 
two towns and villages were burned to ashes, 
four thousand persons murdered, and mul- 
titudes of little children were suffered to 
perish after their parents had fallen. About 
four thousand persons sought refuge in flight, 
and returned afterwards to their old abodes, 
but to live on in a pitiable state. These moun- 
taineers were massacred for the same reasons 
as the Reformed had been — their faith in the 
sufficiency of the Scriptures. 

1546. The next year witnessed the martyrdom of 
the ''Fourteen at Meaux.'' In that city the 
building in which the reformed doctrines had 
been preached with success was destroyed, 
and another erected on the same site in which 
mass was celebrated. Fourteen of the people 
who used to worship in the former building 
were seized and refusing to abjure their faith 
were committed to the flames. 

1547. Francis I. died May 31, 1547, and his bigoted 
Frands^i.^^^^ liccutious SOU, Hcury H., succeeded him. 

and Henry was a chip of the old block, though of 

Son of ^^^^ mental and physical ability. Having 

Henry II. married Catherine de Medici, niece of Pope 



PERSECUTION OF REFORMERS. 23 

Clement VII,, lie was bound more closely to introd. 
the Romish church. During his reign, (1547- 
59), the reformed religion grew steadily de- 
spite the most earnest attempts to destroy it. 
Its growth may be attributed mainly to the in- 
fluence and labors of three persons, and the 
help extended it from abroad. 

One of these persons was Renata, daughter Renata. 
of Louis XII., and sister of Claude, wife of 
Francis I. Born in Blois, October 25, 1510, 
Renata enjoyed in early life the company and 
influence of Marguerite, and the advantages of 
association with the Reformers, and of their 
writings. Carefully educated; endowed with 
many mental qualifications; quick of wit; apt 
to learn; delighting in the study of theology 
as drawn from the Scriptures ; capable of dis- 
tinguishing between true and false principles 
in morals and religion; possessed of ardent 
affection, strong feelings, and strong will; she 
chose for herself the religion of the Reformers, 
and even ranked with Marguerite in her influ- 
ence for it. In 1527, the year that Marguerite 
became Queen of Navarre, she became the 
wife of Hercules De Este, Duke of Ferrara 
and Modena in Italy, bordering on France. 
Her husband was always partial to the Pope, 
under whose influence he was often severe. 
The Reformers in time of trouble found a ref- 
uge with her. Calvin, whose Mstitutes was 
her standard of theology, and Clement Marot, 
the Psalm singer, each at a different time 
found a refuge with her. The Duke would 
sometimes make it prudent for the Reformers 
to retire, but could never abate her strength 
of attachment for the Evangelical doctrines 
which she embraced in youth. Near the close 
of her life, she was threatened by the Duke of 



24 EISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd . Greve with destruction of Montagris, where 
she was then residing, if she did not expel 
from it some Protestants. She replied: *'If 
you come, I will be present in the breach, and 
I will try whether you will have the boldness 
to kill the daughter of a king. If you should 
commit such a crime, heaven and earth will 
avenge her death, on all your lives, even to the 
children in their cradles." The Duke, to 
whom she had espoused her daughter, Ann 
of Este, paused and threatened her no more. 
She was always exposed to trials because she 
resided between the two fires of France on 
the one side, and Rome the seat of papacy on 
the other. But she maintained her faith to the 
last, and lived to see the Reformed Church of 
France fully organized, separated from Rome, 
and extending its influence over a large part 
of her native country. She died June 12, 1575. 
John During the same period, John Calvin was 
Calvin, another person who wielded a great influence 
in behalf of the new religion. Born in France 
at Noyon, Picardy, July 10, 1509, when 
eighteen years of age, by advice of his father, 
he turned his attention to law and became 
brilliant, receiving the Degree of Doctor of 
Laws. After the death of his father in 1531, 
he studied Greek and Protestantism under 
Melchior Wolmar, and theology in Paris. In 
the latter part of 1532, he was thoroughly con- 
verted to the Reformed Religion. He preached 
frequently in the meetings of the Protestants, 
commonly closing with the words, '*If God be 
for us, who can be against us.'* He prepared 
the inaugural address of Nicholas Cop, which 
Cop delivered in 1533, before a large assembly. 
The address was a plea for reform in the Es- 
tablished Church, on a pure gospel basis. On 



PERSECUTION OF REFORMERS. 25 

account of its sentiments Calvin had to flee to introd . 
the south of France and wander for some time 
under assumed names, but was all the while 
sowing the seeds of the Reformation. The 
outbreak of persecution in 1534 compelled his 
flight to Strassburg, and in 1536, he was in 
Basle where he ]3ublished his immortal Insti- 
tutes. In August of the same year, while in 
Geneva, he was induced by Farel's burn- 
ing words of God's possible wrath towards 
him to renounce his studies, and to espouse 
actively the cause of the Reformation, which 
he did in his writings from Geneva. Few 
could excel Calvin in the use of the pen. 
His correspondence became immense all over 
Europe. His letters, his Institutes, and his 
commentaries on the Scriptures were sent 
particularly to France and circulated ex- 
tensively. The productions of his pen went 
where he dared not go, and silently operated 
on the judgment and heart of the people. 
His influence was almost incredible. Strin- 
gent laws against the importation of books 
from Geneva accomplished nothing, and the 
result was that the final organization of the 
Reformed Church of France was modeled after 
Calvin's ideal. Thus, while he was not per- 
sonally in France, where he wished to live and 
die, his sentiments were there, which molded 
the hearts of the people, and modeled in their 
minds the Scriptural Church of his choice. 
He died May 27, 1564. 

It was in the same period that the poet, element 
Clement Marot, arose. His influence on the ^^^°*^ 
Reformatorv movement consisted in his trans- 
lations of some of the Psalms mto French 
verse. In 1540 he versified and printed 
twenty Psalms into lively ballad measure and 



26KISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd dedicated them to the King. The demand for 
copies was greater than the supply. The Sor- 
bonne censured the book, but the King and 
Court carried it against all opposition. It be- 
came so popular that everywhere and by all 
classes the Psalms of Marot might be heard at 
all times sung to lively tunes; and for a while 
they superceded the national songs. Encour- 
aged by his first edition, he paraphrased 
thirty more Psalms in the same measure, and 
printed the fifty in one volume in Geneva in 
1543, with a preface by Calvin, which was 
widely circulated. After this Beza versified 
the remaining Psalms, which were printed 
with Marot ^s in one volume. Calvin then per- 
suaded two accomplished musicians to set the 
whole to music. In a little time ten thousand 
copies were sold. People sang them in pri- 
vate, at meals, and in their social circles, and 
with whatever motive, the effect was good to 
their conscience. In 1553, the Reformed in- 
troduced the use of these Psalms in their 
worship, which was the cause of their rejec- 
tion by the Romanists. After that, to sing one 
of them was evidence of a desire to reform the 
Roman Catholic Church. But their rejection 
was too late. The Psalms had already done 
their work, which can never be estimated for 
the good of pure religion. Marot died in 1554. 
During the first four years of the reign of 
Henry II., nothing in the way of persecution 
transpired worthy of special mention. He 
followed in the wake of his father, encour- 
aging the Reformation in Germany to weaken 
his father's rival, Charles V., while he perse- 
1551. cuted it in his own kingdom. He issued the 
Chatelu- ^^^^* ^^ Chateaubriand, June 27, 1551, which 

briand. cnjoincd upou the civil and ecclesiastical 



PERSECUTION OF REFORMERS. 27 

courts to combine for the detection and introd. 
punishment of Reformers. Persons convicted 
of the reformed faith were to be denied 
the right of appeal from the decision of 
these courts. Persons suspected were to be 
excluded from every public preferment and 
all academic honors. Heavy penalties were 
to be imposed upon any who should harbor 
Reformers, connive at their escape, or present 
petitions in their behalf. Informers were to 
be awarded one-third part of the goods of 
those informed on. All heretical books from 
abroad were forbidden, and a rigid censor- 
ship of the home press was established to 
prevent the publication of such works. But 
notwithstanding these harsh repressive meas- 
ures the Reformers continued to increase. 

In 1553, Henry II. permitted the martyr- 1553. 
dom of five young men, in Lyons, Southeast l^^^' 
France. They were arrested for maintaining in Lyons 
the doctrines of the Reformation — that man is 
saved by faith alone in Christ, that the Scrip- 
tures were sufficient without tradition, and 
that a reform of the Romish Church was 
needed, and in default of that a Reformed 
French Church. On their way to the place of 
execution they sang one of Marot's Psalms in 
French, recited the Apostle ^s creed in sen- 
tences, one after the other in turn, and before 
execution prayed and kissed each other. A 
chain bound all five to a stake and a rope was 
arranged around their necks to strangle and 
spare them the suffering of burning alive, but 
the flames soon burned the cord, and they died 
crying to each other in the midst of the flames, 
"Courage brother!" Multitudes in Lyons 
immediately imbibed the courage with which 
they died, and soon professed faith in the Re- 



28 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. formed religion. From their example we leam 
how a courageous death and the song of the 
martyr in flames will inspire others to embrace 
that faith which will sustain in such last, great 
ordeal. 
1555- In September, 1555, an attempt was made 
before Parliament in Paris to introduce the 
Spanish Inquisition, but failed in consequence 
of its enlightened and liberal minded Presi- 
dent, Sequier, who favored mild proceedings 
against the so-called "heretics." While the 
discussion was going on, the first Protestant 
church in France was organized in a private 
house in Paris ; and almost immediately there 
First sprang up fifteen Protestant Communities, 
^chu™h^^-^^ largest being at Meaux, Poitiers, and 
Angers, each having its pastor, elders and 
deacons, each ruling itself, and recognizing no 
common bond of union save that of charity 
and suffering. 

In the same year an expedition was planned 
by Admiral Coligny, and sailed for Brazil to 
settle a colony of Reformers in that country, 
where they were for a time free from persecu- 
tion; but the scheme finally failed through the 
treachery of Villegagnon. 
1559- In the spring of 1559, Henry II., influenced 
by the Romanists, appeared in Parliament at 
the head of an imposing escort, and reproached 
it for the lukewarmness shown in respect to 
the church. Anne Dubourg, a member of the 
body, who had embraced the reformed religion 
the preceding year, spoke immediately after 
the King with great openness and eloquence, 
and affirmed that, "There is a necessity for a 
reform; the persecution of those called heretics 
cannot be justified." The Ejng construed the 
words as an insult to his royal personage and 



PERSECUTION OF REFORMERS. 29 

becoming provoked had him arrested and con- introd. 
demned, and said, "I hope with mine own eyes 
to see Dubourg burnt/ ^ That noble and 
honest man was strangled and then burned at 
the stake in Paris, but the King was not per- 
mitted to realize his fiendish desii'e, for he 
himself died before the execution. 

The Reformers increased greatly in num- 
bers during the last years of the reign of 
Henry. As proof of this fact, about six weeks 
before the Monarch lost his life, the first First 
National Synod of the Reformed Church of^g^Jj°^°^^ 
France met secretly in Paris, May 26, 1559. 1559.* 
It adopted a Confession of Faith, and estab- 
lished in its ecclesiastical discipline a repre- 
sentative form of government, with its courts, 
consistory, provincial Synod and National 
Synod. The National S}Tiod was the supreme 
ecclesiastical court, composed of representa- 
tives from the thirteen Provincial Synods, 
which held jurisdiction over the same terri- 
tory as did the thirteen Provincial Parlia- 
ments. 

It was during the same year that Henry U. 1559. 
concluded a disgraceful peace with Philip II., 
of Spain, which surprised all Europe. One of 
his chief secret motives was that of the exter- 
mination of the Protestants. Cardinal Lor- 
raine, with the knowledge and approbation of 
the Pope, induced the two kings to cease from 
war, and to unite their powers for the destruc- 
tion of the Reformers, who were already too 
numerous. This part of the treaty was not 
revealed to the world till after years. One 
article of the public treaty was that Henry 
should give his eldest sister. Marguerite, in 
marriage to the Duke of Savoy, and his own 
daughter, Isabella, to Philip, the King of 



30 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd . Spain. It was at the celebration of these 
Death of Duptials in Paris, that Henry II. received an 
Henry 11. accidental wound from whicli he died, July 10, 
1559, which thwarted the contemplated ex- 
termination of the Reformed by the joint 
powers. 
F^rfncis "^^^ brief reign of Henry ^s eldest son, 
'ii."^ Francis II. (1559-60), a youth of only sixteen 
years of age was eventful. The execution of 
Anne Dubourg, December 23, 1559, w^ho was 
distinguished for ability and singular purity 
of character, contributed more to advance 
Protestantism in France, and to exasperate 
liberal-minded men against the prevailing 
tyranny, than any previous acts of cruelty. 

Francis II., being in minority, his mother, 
Catherine De Medici, assumed the regency of 
the kingdom. The question arose between 
two families of the Princes of blood, as to 
which of them had the right to administer the 
affairs of the kingdom during the minority of 
Bourbon Francis. One of these families was repre- 
cSse stilted by Antoine, of Bourbon, King of 
Families. Navarre, and his brother, Louis, Prince of 
Conde; the other by Charles, Cardinal of Lor- 
raine, and his brother, Francis, Duke of Guise. 
The Bourbon line favored the Protestants, the 
Guises favored the Romanists. Fears were 
entertained, not only of a protracted regency 
by the Queen Mother, but also that the crown 
might soon depart from the Valois line on ac- 
count of the feeble constitution and sickly 
habits of the young King, and the delicate 
appearance of his younger brothers. Hence 
the succession of the crown was discussed 
throughout the kingdom. Both aspirants, the 
Bourbons and the Guises, were active in 
strengthening their claims. 



PERSECUTION OF REFORMERS. 31 

The Bourbons could claim amon^ the i ntrod . 
nobility, the King of Navarre, the Prince of 
Conde, Admiral Coligny, the Chattillons and 
many others, and the majority of the middle 
classes of Society. The Guises could claim 
the majority of the nobility, and of the lower 
classes. Catherine De Medici had her settled 
principles also, which were to maintain her 
regency during the minority of her children; 
to prevent the Bourbons from securing the 
Crown, if it should pass from her hands; and 
in case she succeeded in both, then the exter- 
mination of the Protestants both in church and 
state. To carry out her designs she gave the 
powers of an active mind, the energy of a 
powerful will, the resources of an unscrupu- 
lous heart, and never gave over in circumven- 
tion, fraud and deception, till the Crown 
finally passed to the Bourbons in 1584, to 
which stirring events will lead us. 

In 1560, the above mentioned nobles and a 1560. 
great number of distinguished persons on the 
Bourbon side met at Vendome to consult about 
settling the regency. Conde proposed to take 
up arms, but the King of Navarre and Coligny 
objected on the ground that such a course 
W'Ould expose them to the charge of treason. 
The proposition finally prevailed that a depu- 
tation should wait on the Queen Mother to 
persuade her to abandon the Guise pretensions 
and to favor the Bourbon claims, or to at least 
grant the Protestants a share in the govern- 
ment. The King of Navarre was sent to A^sit Antoine 
the court, but all his propositions and remon- ^^^^" 
strances were ultimately rejected. The Queen Queen 
Mother, however, with great address, won the Mother, 
confidence of Antoine, who finally returned to 
his home in Beam, satisfied with the brilliant 



32 KISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. promises made him. But Conde and many 
others were greatly dissatisfied. Consequent- 
ly two other meetings of the Reformers were 
speedily held, which resulted in arousing and 
uniting their numerous adherents in the South 
to demand and defend their rights. Having 
chosen Conde for their leader, they decided 
February, 1560, at Nantes, that a body of un- 
armed men should appear at the gates of Blois, 
where the court was residing, and demand 
leave to present to the King a petition, pray- 
ing for liberty of conscience and religious 
toleration. In case of unkind reception given 
the petitioners, they were to be protected by 
small bodies of armed men advancing by 
different routes. In this scheme they were 
betrayed to the Duke of Guise, who persuaded 
the court to remove to Amboise. A military 
force was also prepared for the occasion. 
When the Embassy appeared at Amboise, they 
were driven from the gates, and their armed 
forces which were advancing by different 
routes were unexpectedly attacked, slain and 
captured, few escaping. Some of the captured 
were immediately hanged, and some 1,200 men 
perished. Conde who was the first to reach 
the court was captured and put under guard, 
Hugue- but soon after released. 

Desi> It ^^^ from this time that the Reformers 

nated. Were distinctively called Huguenots. 

1560. In March of the same year (1560), the 

SynoS^ second National Synod of the Reformed 

Church of Prance met at Poitiers, with Le 

Baillem, President. 

War was now begun, and Guise to 
strengthen himself proposed the Inquisition. 
The wisest statesman of the age. Chancellor 
Michael L'Hopital, advocated toleration for 



PERSECUTION OF EEFORMERS. 33 

the two reasons: *'lst. The justice of the introd . 
thing, arising out of man's relation to man, 
and to God. 2d. The large and increasing 
number of the Huguenots, who as loyal citi- 
zens had equal rights with the Catholics. '' The 
result was the Edict of Romorantin, May, Edict of 
1560, in which the King gave to Parliament ^^^^^ 
the right of deciding in matters of faith, leav- 
ing to the bishops the privileges of discover- 
ing and pointing out heretics. 

In August, 1560, the Queen Regent called 
an Assembly of the principal persons of the^^sembiy 
kingdom to meet at Fontainbleau. There were Fontain- 
present the royal famil}^, with the Cardinals, ^^^au. 
Bourbon and Lorraine, the Duke of Guise, the 
Constable Montmorency, the Chancellor 
L'Hopital, the Admiral Coligny, the Marshals, 
Brissac and St. Andre, the Archbishop of 
Vienne, the Bishops of Orleans and Valence, 
and many others. Admiral Coligny assured 
the Assembly that the principal discontents 
arose from persecutions for difference in reli- 
gion and presented a petition from Normandy 
praying for redress. The King objected to the 
petition because it bore no signatures of 
names. But Coligny replied: ''True; but if 
you will permit us to meet for the purpose, I 
will in one day obtain 50,000 in Normandy 
alone." The resolution was finally carried in 
the Assembly by three votes, that citizens of 
France shall conform to the Romish Church 
or quit the kingdom, with leave to sell their 
estates. It was shown, however, by the Chan- 
cellor and the Huguenots, the unreasonable- 
ness of enforcing a resolution carried by only 
three votes; and the Assembly finally agreed 
to lay all the matters before an Assembly of 
the States to meet December 13, at Meaux, and 



34 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. to be assisted by a national council. Shortly 
after this, in the month of September, Conde 
was beguiled and arrested by Guise on the 
charge of high treason, that he had excited the 
Huguenots of Dauphiny to rebellion. He was 
soon brought to trial and condemned to death, 
but the death of the young King, Francis II., 
December 5, 1560, prevented his execution. 
Francis Francis n. was succeeded by his younger 
Death brother, Charles IX., a youth of ten years of 

and ' age. During his reign (1560-74) the tolerant 
Chiles policy of Chancellor L'Hopital for a time pre- 

King. vailed. The Queen Mother, conscious that the 
question of the regency would again revive, 
began to conciliate the Bourbon leaders; and 
yet carry on her deeply laid schemes in dis- 
guise. She at once pardoned Conde and set 
him at liberty, and later on made the King of 
Navarre, Lieutenant-general of the kingdom. 

1560. The States met December 13th, but ac- 
complished nothing which immediately con- 
cerned the Huguenots. Admiral Coligny, the 
King of Navarre, and the Prince of Conde 
were then urged to present a petition involving 
toleration to the young King. He referred it 
to the privy council who laid it before Parlia- 
Edict of ment. The result was the Edict of July, 1561, 

"isei which prohibited persecutions on account of 
religion, but forbade the exercise of any other 
than the Romish religion, either publicly or 
privately, under penalty of imprisonment and 
confiscation. The passage of this law intensi- 
fied the feelings between the two great re- 
ligious parties. While the Romanists exulted, 
the Huguenots did not conceal their indigna- 
tion. Even Coligny, pacific and anxious to 
avert the impending calamity of civil war, 
declared plainly that the Edict could not be 



PERSECUTION OF REFORMERS. 35 

carried out. Meanwhile, as the strength of the introa. 
Huguenots grew more apparent, and their 
position more menacing, the necessity of con- 
ciliation became obvious to the court. 

The Queen Regent now turned to Coligny 
for advice. The Admiral counseled toleration; 
and to show its expediency, presented to her a 
list of 2,150 Protestant churches, that asked 
for freedom and protection in the exercise of 
their religion. From the organization of the 
first church in 1555, the Reformed had in- 
creased to 2,150 churches in about six years. 
The advice of Coligny was heeded by the 
Queen Mother, and the call of a conference 
was issued September 3, for the representa- 
tives of both religions to discuss freely before 
the King and Court their different doctrines, 
and the necessity of a reformation. 

The conference convened at Poissy, Septem- Confer- 
ber 9, 1561, and lasted about six weeks. Cardi- t?*^.® *' 

1 -r • 1 • • 1 Poissy. 

nal Lorrame appeared as principal manager 
for the Romanists, supported by five other 
Cardinals, the Archbishop of Bourdeaux and 
Embrun, thirty-six Bishops and a number of 
theologians. Theodore Beza came over from 
Switzerland, as principal for the Reformers, 
supported by Peter Martyr Vermigli, eleven 
of the most accredited pastors, and twenty- 
two representatives. The young King pre- 
sided with his mother at his side, surrounded 
by the splendidly attired princes of the court, 
and the Roman representatives. A railing 
immediately in front cut them ofi: from the Re- 
formers, and presented the appearance rather 
of a judicial enquir}^ than that of a free confer- 
ence. The meeting was opened by a speech 
from Chancellor L'Hopital which showed the 
Reformers that thev did not meet their adver- 



36 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. saries as they had demanded and expected on 
exactly equal terms; but which also showed 
the Romanists that they were not simply sit- 
ting in judgment, for their verdict would have 
no effect if it were not found perfectly im- 
partial and just. The word was then given 
to Beza. He appeared before the railing 
in the nobleman's black suit, and deliber- 
ately looking round upon the august array 
of Romanists, bowed respectfully to the 
young King and said: ''Sire, our help is in 
the name of the Lord, who made heaven 
and earth,'' and then knelt and prayed. The 
Queen Mother also knelt, and the Cardi- 
nals arose and uncovered. His prayer is still 
used in the French Reformed church at the 
opening of divine service. Beza's long speech 
explained clearly the Huguenot faith, and 
elucidated the points of diiference and agree- 
ment between the Romanists and Protestants. 
It was calm, cool, conciliatory, and was 
listened to with breathless attention, except- 
ing one interruption. When he exclaimed 
with raised hands and a loud voice, ' ' The body 
of Jesus Christ is as far from bread and wine 
as heaven is from earth," Cardinal Tournon 
jumped to his feet and cried out "Blasphem- 
avit!" and such a tumult arose among the pre- 
lates, that the Queen Mother herself had to 
interfere and impose quiet. Beza, however, 
remained calm, and continued his speech, 
which was printed the next day, and dis- 
tributed by thousands among friends and foes. 
On September 16, the second session was 
held. Cardinal Lorraine answered Beza in a 
proud speech, but adroit and impressive, 
which he refused for publication. After this 
the Romanists declined to continue the dis- 



PEESECUTION OF REFORMERS. 37 

cussions in public, and the remaining sessions introd . 
(September 24, 26, etc.) were consequently 
held with closed doors. In the session of 
September 26, Cardinal Lorraine cunningly 
proposed that the Reformers subscribe to 
the Ausburg Confession, his policy being 
to show off the differences existing among 
the Reformers themselves. But it was as 
cunningly met by Beza, who asked him to 
subscribe his own name first, and on his 
refusal, Beza showed that it would accom- 
plish nothing unless the Romanists subscribed 
to it also. In the same session, a mixed 
committee offered a formula consensus to be 
accepted by both parties, which seemed satis- 
factory, but the doctors of the Sorbonne 
rejected it as heretical. In the session of Oc- 
tober 6, the Catholics presented a strictly 
Romish Confession and demanded the sub- 
scription of the Reformers. In the final ses- 
sion, October 17, they went even further, and 
demanded that all the churches and all the 
church property which the *' heretics ^^ had 
taken possession of in the various provinces 
should be restored. The Conference dis- 
solved without any decision made by King and 
Council. During the time of the Conference, 
the financial pressure which arose compelled 
the King to lean to the Romanist, who could 
supply him the funds needed. Nevertheless, 
the Conference furnished the opportunity for 
the Protestants to publicly vindicate their re- 
ligious views, Beza preached repeatedly in 
Poissy and with great success during the sit- 
ting of the Conference, and remained in 
France about two years. 

The Huguenots now fell back upon the Edict 
of July, which prohibited persecution for re- 



38KISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. ligion^s Sake. Their meetings for public 
worship in the city of Paris were often very 
large, amounting to thousands, protected by 
armed men, the women being placed in the 
centre. 
Finally, a council was called by the Queen 

Edict of Mother, and an edict published January 17, 
tion? 1562, which conceded to the Huguenots the 
1562. liberty to meet for worship, without arms in 
all places outside of the walled towns. That 
Edict was the first recognition of the ''New 
Religion '^ in France, giving it some degree of 
protection under the laws. It was the Magna 
Charta of Huguenot rights, and is known as 
the famous ' ' Edict of Januar}^ ' ' At this time, 
there were not less than 400,000 Huguenots in 
the kingdom, of whom only one thirtieth were 
the common-folk, and one-third were of the 
nobles — their strength being in the noblesse. 
Their two centers were Languedoc in the 
South, and Orleannois in the middle of the 
country. A line drawn northwest to south- 
east, through a point half way between Paris 
and Orleans, would nearly give the northern 
limit of their success. In Normandy (north- 
west), Orleannoise (central), and Burgundy 
(Southeast), they had many churches, while 
north of the line they also had some churches 
in the Isle of France, and in Champagne. In 
Guyenne (southwest), and throughout western 
France they had numerous communities. The 
little independent principality of Beam (ex- 
treme southwest), through the influence of 
Jean D'Albret, was entirely Huguenot. They 
had thus spread over considerably more than 
half of the country. 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 39 

III. 

The Huguenot Wars to Maintain their Rights 
and to Secure Full Religious Toleration 

(1562-98). 

Wliile the Huguenots rejoiced in the liberty introd. 
granted them by the Edict of January, the 
Guises and their partisans became exasper-Huguenot 
ated and put forth renewed efforts against w^'^^- 
them. Antony, the King of Navarre, was per- '^^^'^ * 
suaded by the machinations of the Queen 
Mother, the pope's legate, and the Spanish 
embassadors, to forsake their cause and to es- 
pouse that of the Romanists. He was induced 
by them to believe that such a course would 
greatly increase his chances for securing the 
succession of the crown, should it pass from 
the Valois line. His career was soon run, for 
he was wounded in the first siege undertaken 
against the Huguenots, and died. 

On March 1, 1562, the Duke of Guise, at- ^562. 
tended by a great retinue, was passing through ^°°^^*^^ 
the town of Vassy, en route to Paris. At the vassy. 
time, there were assembled in a barn at Vassy 
about 1,200 of its Huguenot citizens engaged 
in divine worship. Some of the Guise men 
provoked a quarrel with the w^orshippers, and 
brought on a conflict. The Huguenots were 
attacked by the armed men, led by Guise him- 
self, and for an hour they fired, hacked, and 
stabbed the worshippers in great carnage. 
Sixty Huguenots of l3oth sexes were left dead 
on the spot, more than two hundred were 
severely wounded, and the rest made their es- 
cape. The Duke himself received a wound. 
This was the first bloodshed under the reign of 
Charles IX., and within less than two months 



40 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. after the Edict of Toleration. Duke Guise 
sent for the local judge and severely repri- 
manded him for having permitted the Hugue- 
nots of Vassy to meet; and when the judge in- 
trenched himself behind the Edict of January, 
he became enraged, and striking the hilt of 
his sword with his hand, said, ' ' The sharp edge 
of this will soon cut your edict to pieces.'* 
The Vassy massacre was the match applied to 
the charge ready to explode, the signal to the 
Itomanists to rise in mass against the heretics, 
and to the Huguenots a warning for their lives. 

First It was the cause of the first war of the Hiigiie- 

.Z%. '""'^ ('562-63). 

Admiral Coligny and the Prince of Conde 
were the Huguenot leaders; Constable Mont- 
morency, the Duke of Guise, and Marshal St. 
Andre were the principal Romanists' generals, 
swollen September 11, 1562, Rouen fortified by the 
Taken. Hugucnots was attacked, and after much 
bloodshed taken by assault. For eight days 
the town was plundered by the Romanists' 
soldiers. Here it was that Antony, King of 
Navarre, fell. On December 19, a battle was 
fought at Dreux, in which after a terrible 
struggle the Huguenots yielded. The com- 
manders of each army, Conde and Mont- 
morency, were taken prisoners, and St. Andre 
fell in battle. The prisoners were immedi- 
1563. ately exchanged. The Duke of Guise next 
marched against Orleans, but was assassi- 
nated in his own camp by a fanatic named 
Poltrot, February 18, 1563, before he at- 
i>eaceof tacked that Protestant stronghold. The 
-Amboise.Q^^ggj^ Mother, realizing the loss sustained in 
Duke Guise, and informed of a threatened in- 
vasion of the English on the coast of Nor- 
mandy, concluded the peace of Amboise, 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 41 

March 19, by which the Huguenots were again introd. 
granted the privilege of the Edict of January 
with several additions. 

The two armies now united to beat back the 
English. As soon as that matter was settled, 
, and Catherine de Medici could dispense with 
the aid of the Huguenots, she restricted their 
privileges, and began to plot their extermina- 
tion. The secret treaty between her son, 
Henry H. and Philip, King of Spain, in the 
spring of 1559, and its execution thwarted by 
Henry's untimely death, and which she had 
never ceased to cherish, she now hoped to be 
able to execute. She and the young King 
spent 1564-65 in a tour through the provinces 
bordering on Germany. At the close of the 
tour, they were met at Bayonne by the Queen 
of Spain, the eldest sister of the King, and 
the Duke of AJva. There it was planned that Plot to 
Charles IX. should act in concert with Philip ^""l^^' 
of Spain to exterminate the Huguenots. Alva Hugue- 
proposed that Charles should immediately ^°*g 
seize the chief men of the Huguenots, and 
strike off their heads, but Catherine thought 
the proposition prematurely unwise. In 1566, 
she convened all the thirteen Parliaments of 
the kingdom at Maulins, and after all the 
affairs of state had been arranged, she at- 
tempted to reconcile the aspirants to the 
crown. Failing in the attempt, she became 
more exasperated than ever, and ordered both 
parties to quit the court, retaining however 
Marshal Montgomery and Cardinal Lorraine, 
who originally proposed the secret plot to ex- 
terminate the Huguenots. At this time the 
German Protestant princes were induced by 
Admiral Coligny to send an embassy to 
Charles IX. to entreat him to allow the Hugue- 



42 RISE AND PEOGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. nots full religious liberty. The embassy and 
the bold language of Collgny and Conde ir- 

1567. ritated the King. In the summer of 1567, at 
an Assembly of the Huguenots held at St. 
Valery, they learned of the determination of 
the court to arrest, and put to death if possible 
Coligny and Conde, and of other severe 
measures which it contemplated. The Hugue- 
nots became alarmed and held a conference at 
Chatillon in September, in which they re- 
solved to prepare for war in all ways, and if 
possible to seize the young King and his 
mother who were at Monceaux. Their coun- 
sels were betrayed to Catherine, who with all 
the court, fled to Paris, closely pressed by 
Conde and Coligny : the Cardinal Lorraine lost 
his carriage in the stampede and fled by by- 

^wa?^ paths. Paris was now besieged. This began 
1567-68. the second war of the Huguenots (iS^7~^^)' 

After a siege of a month on the capital, 
Conde and Montmorency clashed in a great 
battle, November 10, 1567, at St. Dennis. 
Two thousand seven hundred Huguenots 
fought against twenty thousand royal troops. 
Montmorency was mortally wounded and died 
the next dav. The victorv was drawn. The 
Huguenots remained one day to care for their 
dead and wounded, and then fell back into 
Lorraine, where they were reinforced January 

1568. 11, 1568, b}^ 10,000 German allies under Prince 
John Casimer. With his army replenished, 
Conde again threatened Paris in the following 
month, and the Queen Mother in her flight 
Treaty of from the city, offered the treaty of Long- 
jume^u. jumeau, which was signed March 27, 1568, re- 
establishing the terms of the Amboise treaty, 
and is known as the little peace of Longjumeau. 
Catherine gave no regard to this treaty, which 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 43 

was made to wrest the Huguenots from the ad- introd. 
vantages of a victory, and to give the Romans 1568. 
time to better prepare for war. Persecution 
went on as usual. The Romish pulpits encour- 
aged by the court proclaimed that faith need 
not be kept with heretics, and that to murder 
them was just, pious and useful for salvation. 
More than 3,000 Huguenots were either assas- 
sinated or murdered in less than three months. 
The Chancellor L'Hopital, on account of the 
pacific measures he advocated, had become 
obnoxious to the court, and was dismissed or 
forced to resign, and the seizure of Conde and 
Coligny was again resolved on, who were 
warned by some of the royal officers to flee for 
their lives. Conde and Coligny assembled 
forces in September at La Rochelle, a strong- 
hold of the Huguenots, and were closely 
followed by the royal blood-hunters. The 
Queen of Navarre and her son. Prince Henry, 
being warned by Coligny hastened to join 
them, bringing some money, and 3,000 in- 
fantry and 400 cavalry. The royal troops 
were kept at bay by the Huguenot generals, 
until La Rochelle was safely fortified. Cather- 
ine, finding herself outwitted in the execution 
of her diabolical designs, once more resorted to 
pacify the Huguenots into submission by pub- 
lishing another edict, declaring the willing- 
ness of the government to protect Protestants 
in the future, and to redress injustice to them 
in the past. But having been so often deceived 
by her former edicts, the Huguenots passed 
this one unnoticed. That greatly enraged her, 
and she at once promulgated other edicts, 
which revoked all former ones, and forbade 
under penalty of death the exercise of any re- 
ligion save the Roman Catholic. The Hugue- 



War. 
1568-70 



44 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. nots regarded her acts as a public declaration 
of war against the Protestant religion, and al- 

TMrd ready fortified in their strongholds, and with 
recent assistance from Germany and England, 
they began their third civil war fof religious 
rights, (i^68-yo). 

On March 13, 1569, the two armies, with 
Conde commanding the Huguenots, and the 
Duke of Anjou at the head of the Catholics, 
met in battle at Jarnac, near La Rochelle. 
The Huguenots were defeated, with Conde 
wounded and made a prisoner, whom Baron 
De Montesquin, captain of Anjou 's guards, 
murdered in cold blood, when he recog- 
nized him in camp, sitting helpless and faint 
from his wound. The Huguenot army was 
then entrusted to Coligny. The Admiral to 
encourage the army urged Jean D'Albret, 
Queen of Navarre, to give them her son as 
a princely leader. She hastened to Cognac 
where the army was encamped, and pre- 
sented her son. Prince Henry, then in his 16th 
year, and Henry, son of the fallen Conde, who 
was still younger, as leaders of the cause under 
Coligny. Having received reinforcements 
from Germany, the army besieged Poitiers, 
but was badly defeated in a battle at Moncon- 
tour, October 3, 1569, with the loss of 8,000 
men; and only the military blunders of Anjou 
saved the Huguenot army from ruin and coni- 
plete overthrow. The court now thought the 
Huguenots in that part of the kingdom an- 
nihilated. But they received means from 
England, Switzerland, and Germany, and the 
court was surprised in the spring of 1570 to 
find them again in arms, crossing the Rhone, 
and routing the ro3^alists. The Huguenots, 
becoming encouraged by the news of the sue- 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 45 

cess of Prince Henry of Navarre (in the sick- introd . 
ness of Coligny), in defending La Roclielle, 
and in holding his own in battles against 
Marshal Cope and Anjou, now laid siege to 
Paris. The court became alarmed and treatedireaty of 
for peace. The Huguenots were enabled, st._^ 
August 8, 1570, to dictate the treaty of St. en-Laye. 
Germain-en-Laye, by which they were guar- ^570. 
anteed full liberty of worship outside of Paris, 
equality before the law, and admission to the 
Universities. They were also to hold for two 
years four towns: — La Rochelle, which kept 
the sea open for assistance from England ; La 
Charite, which kept the passage of the Loire; 
Montauban, which commanded the frontiers 
of Languedoc; and Cognac, which opened the 
w^ay into Angoumois; and if the treaty was 
violated, they were not to be given up at the 
expiration of the stipulated time. The terms 
of this treaty were kept, which gave France a 
state of quiet for two years, but only to be suc- 
ceeded by the outbreak of another storm. 

The King, Charles IX. wrote the Pope 
some few years prior to this that, "A 
fourth part of the kingdom is separated from 
the church, which fourth part consists of 
gentlemen, men of letters, chief burgesses in 
cities, and such of the common people as have 
seen most of the world, and are practised in 
arms. So that the said separated persons have 
no lack of force, having among them an in- 
finite number of gentlemen, and many old 
soldiers of long experience in war. Neither do 
they lack good council, having among them 
three parts of the men of letters. Neither do 
they lack money, having among them a great 
part of the good wealthy families, both of the 
nobility and the tier de eiatj' The numerical 



46 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. and influential increase of the Huguenots and 

1572. tlie physical and mental developments of the 

abilities of the young Prince, Henry of 

Navarre, the Bourbon heir to the throne, 

began now to alarm the Queen Mother. 

Failing so far to crush them by force, she 
sought to accomplish her object by treachery 
and a general massacre. In her artful manner 
Mar- she proposed marriages between her daughter, 
riages Marguerite of Valois and the Prince of 
ropose -j^^yg^p-^^g. between the young Prince of Conde 
and the third heiress of Cleves; and even 
between Coligny and the Countess of Egree- 
ment. By the marriage of her daughter to 
Prince Henry, the kingdom would become 
united, the Guise claim to the crown defeated, 
and the succession would fall to her own 
house; and Henry would have his chances en- 
larged to regain the inheritance of his ances- 
tors from the King of Spain. She hoped to 
persuade Henry to become a Roman Catholic 
which would help her to destroy the Hugue- 
nots. The King, Charles IX., urged the mar- 
riage and promised 400,000 crowns as the 
dowry of his sister. The young prince, Henry, 
was elated over the prospects set before him, 
and the marriage contract was signed April 11, 
1572. The nuptials were to be celebrated in 
Paris, and as many Huguenot noblemen as 
could be induced were put under a solemn 
oath to attend them, and an oath was given for 
their safety. The reception of Jean D'Albret, 
Queen of Navarre, of her children, her ser- 
vants, the members of her court, the suite of 
Prince Henry, and the attending Huguenot 
noblemen, in Paris, was all that expectation 
Death of (,Q^](j fancy. During the splendid prepara- 
D'Arb?et.tions, the Queen of Navarre died after an 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 47 

illness of five days; not without suspicion of introd. 
poison, and her son became King of Navarre. 
The court of Prance went into mourning over 
the Queen's death, but the preparations for 
the wedding went steadily on. The day came, 
August 18, 1572, and the marriage of Margue- 
rite to Henry, King of Navarre, was solem- 
nized on a platform in front of the principal 
entry of the church of Paris, Cardinal Lor- 
raine officiating, and leaving off the Mass by 
express order of the King that he might please 
the Protestants. The festivities continued day 
after day. On Friday, August 22, Coligny 
was invited by the King to attend a council at 
the Louvre, and from there he went to witness 
a game between the King and Guise, and be- 
tween two Huguenot gentlemen at the Tennis 
court. As he returned to his place of lodging 
(No. 144, Rue Rivole, at present), while walk- coUgny 
ing slowly up a narrow street, he was shot Shot 
twice; one ball shattering his hand, and the 157"' 
other lodging in his right arm near the 
shoulder. The shot was fired from the house 
of the preceptor of the Guises. The house was 
searched, but the assassin had escaped; and a 
man was seen riding in full haste from the 
King^s stables. When the news of the assault 
reached the King, he uttered his usual pas- 
sionate oaths, and declared that the house of 
the Guises should be ransacked for the as- 
sassin, though he himself had offered 50,000 
crowns for Coligny 's head. He visited the Ad- 
miral, and his apparent sympathy covered up 
all suspicion of any knowledge that a massacre 
had been planned. The Huguenot Lords de- 
sired now to leave the city, but King Charles 
explained the assassination as an act of malice, 
fostered by a grudge of the Guises, who had 



48 KISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd . falsely accused Coligny of the death of the late 
Duke of Guise. The Admiral refused to leave 
the city, saying, *'By so doing, I must show 
either fear or distrust. My honor would be 
injured by one, my king by the other. I should 
be again obliged to have recourse to civil war; 
and I would rather die than see the miseries I 
have seen, and suffer the distress I have al- 
ready suffered." Many of the nobles retired 
to the country and suburbs of the city. The 
opportune time for a massacre was swiftly 
passing, and the plot of Catherine and Charles 
IX. was not yet executed. To hasten up mat- 
ters, a council was called to meet late in the 
afternoon of Saturday, the 23d. The discus- 
sions in it were heated. The Huguenots were 
leaving the city, and had not attempted to 
avenge the assassination of the Admiral, 
which would have been a plea for the massa- 
cre. The time was now come for action, and 
yet the court hesitated and were undeter- 
mined how the work should begin. Catherine, 
to tone up Charles, had told him, "Another 
King is chosen, and you will soon be murdered 
/ to make way for him"; and so in frenzy he de- 
^ manded of the court the extinction of the 
^^y^g^^"® Huguenots, for the saf et}^ of his own life. The 
Barthoio- decision of the council was at last reached, that 
™J^'s a massacre should begin the next morning at 
Aug^l4, the ringing of the bells for early prayers of St. 
1572. Bartholomew's day, and that the work should 
be entrusted to the Duke of Guise, the Duke of 
Anjou (brother of the King), Aumele, Mont- 
pensier and Marshal Tavannes. The next 
morning, Sunday, August 24, 1572, the bells 
sounded about twilight, before the usual time. 
The two Guises rushed into the streets of 
Paris with armed men, and at the sound of a 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 49 

pistol shot from a window of the palace, (the introd. 
signal for the butchery), they hastened to the 
house of Coligny, who was lying in his 
chamber, suffering from his wounds. The 
very officer of the guard, set to protect him, 
broke down the door for the murderers to enter 
the house. The Swiss soldiers on the stairs, 
set to guard him within, were soon borne 
down and slain. The murderers began break- 
ing down his suite doors, and the noise 
awakened the Admiral. He sent a young 
man to inquire into the cause of the con- 
fusion. The man hearing the clash of arms 
in the passage, and the wild yell for blood 
from the streets, returned and cried out, ' ' My 
Lord! God calls us to himself." "The 
Admiral threw on his loose gown, and bid his 
secretary read prayers, according to his daily 
custom and the form of the Huguenots. The 
thumping at the doors of his chamber pre- 
venting worship, he turned calmly to his 
attendants, 'Save yourselves, my friends; all 
is over with me. I have long been prepared 
for death,' and then kneeled down to his 
private devotions. The doors were broken, 
and Berne rushing in cried out, 'Where is 
Coligny?' 'I am he,' was the bold reply. coUgny 
The ruffian drove his sword through his heart. ?*"^" 
The soldiers that followed gave each a stab 
to the lifeless corpse. Berne cried from a 
window, 'The work is done.' 'Very well,' 
said Guise, 'but Angouleme will not believe 
it unless he sees him at his feet.' A body 
thrown from the window sprinkled the party 
with. its blood; Guise, with his handkerchief, 
wiped the blood and filth from the face of 
the dead body and pronounced it Coligny. 
His revenge not yet satisfied, the head was 
cut off and sent to the Queen Mother. The 



50 KISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. domestics were all slain. The slaughter now 
1572. began in all parts of the city. Marshal Ta- 
vannes was heard to shout, 'Kill, EjII! Bleed- 
ing is as wholesome in August as in May.' " 
Henry of Navarre and Conde were hurried by 
soldiers into the presence of King Charles, and 
as they passed on from the Louvre where they 
were lodging saw several of their gentlemen 
murdered before their eyes on the streets. 
The King ordered them with oaths to abjure 
their religion. They declined. With his eyes 
flashing with rage, he bawled out to them, 
*'The Mass, or death, or the bastile.^' They 
abjured, and were put under guard. Charles 
himself was seen at the windows of his palace 
with a musket in his hands, and was heard to 
cry, ''Kill! Kill! you Huguenots." The mas- 
sacre was kept up through the day. The head- 
less body of Coligny was dragged through the 
streets of the city, then thrown into the Seine, 
and finally taken out and hanged by the feet 
upon the gallows, and a fire kindled under it. 
The King and his court went later to see the 
mutilated body. One of the courtiers re- 
marked, "It smells ill." Charles, the King, 
replied: "The body of a dead enemy always 
smells well." In the several days of excite- 
ment and pellmell, Marshal Montgomery took 
down the abused body, and sent it to Montau- 
ban for interment. A description of this mas- 
sacre is given by De Thou, as follows: "The 
very streets and passages resounded with the 
groans of the dying and of those who were 
about to be murdered. The bodies of the slain 
were thrown out of the windows, and with 
them the courts and chambers of the houses 
were filled. The dead bodies of others were 
dragged through the streets; and the blood 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 51 

flowed down the channels in such torrents that introd. 
it seemed to empty itself into the neighboring 1572. 
river. In short, an innumerable multitude of 
men, women, and children were involved in 
one common destruction, and all the gates and 
entrances to the King's palace were besmeared 
with blood.'' It is estimated that not less 
than 10,000 persons, of w^hom 500 were leaders 
of the Huguenots, fell in Paris alone ; and the 
total throughout the kingdom has been esti- 
mated by De Thou at 30,000, by Sully at 60,- 
000 and by Perefixe, a popish historian, at 
100,000. Orders were sent to other parts of 
the kingdom to follow the example of the capi- 
tal, but in some instances they were not 
obeyed; and in other places — Laucerre, Pre- 
vos, La Rochelle, Montauban, and Msmes — 
the Huguenots defended themselves. 

After the unbridled rage of the massacre 
had subsided, remorse followed with retribu- 
tion on its heels. Sully has recorded the fol- 
lowing statement, concerning the Eang: 
"From the evening of the 24th of August he 
was observed to groan involuntarily at the re- 
cital of the thousands of acts of cruelty made 
boastingly in his presence." He also records 1572. 
the following confession which the King made ^J°^^f 
to his own surgeon, a Huguenot, who lived chS-ies 
with him in great familiarity: "Ambrose, I ^^• 
know not what has happened to me these two 
or three days past; but I feel my mind and 
body as much at enmity with each other as if I 
were seized with a fever. Sleeping or waking, 
the murdered Huguenots seem ever present to 
my eyes, with ghostly faces, and weltering in 
blood. I wish the innocent and helpless had 
been spared." The infidel Voltaire in his essay 
on the civil wars of France says that, "The 



52 KISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. King, soon after the Bartholomew Massacre, 
was attacked by a strange malady, which car- 
ried him off at the end of two years. His 
blood was always oozing out, forcing its way 
through the pores of the skin — an incompre- 
hensible malady, against which the art and 
skill of the physicians were unavailing. This, ' ^ 
he adds, *'was regarded as an effect of the 
Divine vengeance." 

All Catholic France rejoiced in thought that 
the Huguenots, according to the advice of 
Alva of Spain, had been exterminated by the 
one blow. But when the royal troops were 
ordered out to take military possession of 
their strongholds, towns and villages, and to 
complete their subjugation, and while the 
court was revelling in expectation of grand 
success, suddenly the news came that the 
Huguenots were in arms again, as the resur- 
Fourth rection of the dead to the Athenians. Thus 
1572^7*3- ^^S^^ the fourth war of the Htiguenots (iS7^'73)' 
The Duke of Anjou led the royal troops 
against the forts in the hands of the Hugue- 
nots. He made an attack upon La Rochelle, 
but was repulsed, and forced to retire after 
losing nearly his whole army. The cities in 
the South made a tenacious and heroic re- 
sistance, a large part of the royal forces rather 
sympathizing with them. The Duke of Anjou 
becoming King of Poland, peace was con- 
cluded, June 24, 1573, and the Huguenots re- 
ceived as security the towns of Montauban, 
Mmes, and La Rochelle, besides enjoyment of 
freedom of conscience, though not of worship 
Poutique throughout the kingdom. Feeling their weak- 
Party, jjggg from the massacre, they now oegar: to 
unite with the Politiques. These were a large 
body of French gentlemen who loved the 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 63 

honor of their country rather than their reli- introd. 
gious party, and who, though Catholics, were 1573. 
yet moderate and tolerant. While these two 
parties were drawing together the Duke of 
Alencon, the youngest son of Catherine and 
Francis II., becoming vexed at his mother's 
neglect of him, (as heir presumptive to the 
throne, he thought he deserved better treat- 
ment), sought to give himself consideration 
by drawing towards the new and so called 
middle party. The party made a move to 
depose the Queen Mother and the Guises, and 
to place on the throne, as chief of the Ro- 
manists, the Duke of Alencon, who had made 
common cause with it. The leaders had ar- 
ranged with Henry of Navarre and Conde for 
the humiliation of Austria, and only the pre- 
mature rising of the Protestants defeated the 
plan. Catherine, who was ever on the alert 
and nothing was safe while she was moving, 
and as it was seen that King Charles would 
soon die, took the opportunity to lay hands on 
the middle party. She arrested Alencon and 
Henry of Navarre, and Conde fled to Germany, 
where he returned to Protestantism, affirm- 
ing that his abjuration had been wrested from 
him. It was about this time that the fifth 
civil war began, (i^y^-yS). war, 

Charles IX. died in misery, May, 1574, at 1574-76. 
the court of Vincennes. He had never held clfaries 
up his head since St. Bartholomew's Massa- ix., 
ere. The visions of Coligny and of the mur-card?nai 
dered Huguenots haunted him by day and Lorraine, 
terrified his dreams by night. Often he would ^^"^^ 
awaken from sleep and cry out in tears, ' ' The 
murdered people will not leave me." Medi- 
cine could not soothe his sleep, nor art relieve 
his agony. He died in pains unrelievable, 



54 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introa. covered with a bloody sweat, and in sobs and 
1574- tears over the murdered Huguenots. And 
seven months later, December 23d, Cardinal 
Lorraine died also. Both of them bitter ene- 
mies of the Huguenots followed their victims 
to the bar of God, with no reward in this life 
for their cruelt}^, and nothing to expect in the 
life beyond, save the mercy of their judge. 

Henry The ill-omencd crown of Charles IX. fell 
™- to Henry of Anjou (Henry III.), King of 
Poland, the next brother, his mother's favor- 
ite, and the worst of a bad breed. When he 
heard of his brother's death, he was only too 
eager to slip away from Poland like a culprit 
and hasten to Paris, lest the French crown 
should slip from him. And he even dallied 
with the pleasures of Italy for months after- 
wards. An attempt was made to draw him 
over to the Politiques, but it failed. He at- 
tached himself to the Guises, and plunged into 
the grossest dissipation, while he posed before 
the people as a good and zealous Romanist. 
The Politiques and Huguenots made a com- 

1575. pact in 1575, at Milhaucl on the Tarn, and 
chose the Prince of Conde as their head, who 
returned from Germanv, March 1576, with an 
army, and was joined by the Duke of Alencon, 
who was at enmity with the King. About the 
same time, Henry, King of Navarre, while on 
a hunting expedition, escaped from the vigi- 
lance kept over him by the court; renounced 
the Catholicism forced upon him on St. Bar- 
tholomew's day, and joined them. He was 
making rapid progress in the South. Against 
this new movement the Romanists seemed 
powerless. The court became alarmed and 
Peaceof finally concluded the peace of Beaulieu, May, 

^^576. "1576, with terms unusually favorable to both 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 55 

Politiques and Huguenots: — for the latter, introd . 
free worship throughout France, except Paris, 
without restriction as to time and place, unless 
the nobleman on whose lands it was pro- 
posed to meet should object; for the former, to 
Alencon, a large central district; to Conde, 
Picardy; and to Henry of Navarre, Guyenne. 

The Guises, thus frustrated in their political 
schemes, now organized (1576) an association Holy 
called the "Holy League,'^ for the defense of League, 
the Romanists' interests. It was supported '^^^' 
by the Eang, the Pope, the Parliament, the 
Monks and King Philip II. of Spain, but not 
by the liberal minded Catholics. The head of 
the League was Henry, Duke of Guise, who 
hoped to succeed to the throne of France, 
either by deposing the corrupt and feeble 
Henry HI., or by seizing the throne when the 
King's debaucheries should have brought him 
to the grave. The high Catholics, especially 
the Jesuits, now in the first flush of credit and 
success, supported him warmly. The head- 
quarters of the League was at first in Picardy, 
in opposition to the establishment of Conde as 
governor of that province. It was soon foimd, 
however, that Paris was its natural center; 
from which it spread all over France. The 
States refused to furnish means to carry out 
the measures of the League. 

At the convocation of the States-General, at 
Blois, 1576, opinion was found to be as much 
divided therein, as in the country, and no re- 
lief was brought to France. At that convoca- 
tion the King was induced to proclaim himself 
head of the League. This gave rise to the sixth 
sixth civil war^ which lasted only a few months, war. 
(1577). ^"7. 



56 KISE AND PEOGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

^trod . The King, finding the States unwilling to 

1577- supply the money necessary to the Leaguers 

interests, and the Romanists being divided 

Treaty among themselves, the peace of Bergerac 

Bergerac^^^ signed, September, 1577, which reintro- 
'duced discriminations as to cities wherein 
Protestants might worship; entitled noble- 
men to have services in their castles; gave 
to Protestants, as in the previous peace, 
eight cities as pledges of the treaty's faith- 
ful execution; and instituted mixed courts to 
adjudicate cases arising out of differences in 
religion. It was a peace made with the Poli- 
tiques and Huguenots, which was ineffectual 
and settled nothing. The League openly re- 
fused to be bound by it, and continued a har- 
assing, objectless warfare. The Duke of 
1578. Anjou (formerly of Alencon), in 1578, de- 
serted the court party, towards which his 
mother had drawn him, and made friends with 
the Calvinists in the Netherlands, and the 
Southern Provinces named him ''Defender of 
their Liberties.'' 

Tn 1579, the seventh civil war^ called the 

Seventh Gallant 's war, broke out, which also lasted 

I ^^-80 ^ ^^^ months, (1579-80) . During this war the 
" League had it all their own way. The war was 
occasioned by the Guises, who induced the 
King to demand back the towns given to 
the Protestants as securities, and to violate the 
treaty in various ways. Conde answered by 
taking Lafere in November, 1579, and Henry 
of Navarre by taking Cahors in April, 1580. 

Peace of The Duke oi Anjou, having been offered 

Flex, sovereignty over the IJnited Provinces in the 

Netherlands, and intending to employ their 

forces in the conflict, and the Huguenots 

having sustained disasters with the Roman- 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 57 

ists, peace was concluded at Flex, September introd. 
12, 1580, by wMcli the Huguenots were to 
retain their strongholds six years longer. 
Quite a long interval of peace now followed. 
Anjou in the Netherlands could only show hia 
weakness as nothing went well with him. On 
the failure of his attempt to take Antwerp 
(1583), and having utterly wearied out his 
friends, he at last fled to France, where he was 
taken ill with consumption and died in 1584. ^584. 
His death changed at once the complexion of 
the succession of the throne. As Henry III., 
the King, was childless, Henry of Bourbon, the 
Huguenot King of Navarre, became heir to 
the throne of France. The prospects that a 
''heretic" might succeed, caused the "Holy 
League" to spring afresh into life, under the 
influences of the Guises, the strict Catholic 
members of the Parliament, the fanatical 
clergy, and the ultra conservative party. The 
Guises supported by King Philip IE. of Spain, 
made war upon King Henry III., in which 
the Huguenots took no part. The King hesi- 
tated to meet the Guises with promptness, 
and the result was that he was humiliated and 
forced to sign the Edict of Nemours, July 17, Edict of 
1585, by which all modes of worship, excepting^®™®^"- 
that of the Catholic church, were forbidden 
throughout France; all Huguenot ministers 
were to leave the country in one month; and 
all Huguenots in six months; and all previous 
privileges granted them were declared for- 
feited. The Huguenots instead of fleeing the 
country, protected tliemselves, until Henry of 
Navarre and the Prince of Conde prepared to • 
resist the execution of the edict by force of 
arms. England sent them money and Ger- 
many furnished them 30,000 soldiers. 



68 RISE AND PEOGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd . They took the field in 1587, and began the 

eighth war of the Huguenots^ called "the War 

Eighth of the Three Henrys"; i. e. of Henry III., 

War. Henry of Guise, and Henry of Navarre (1587- 

1587-98. ggsj^ 

In this war there was real life. Henry of 
Navarre rose nobly to the level of his troubles. 
He won the battle of Coutras, October 8, 1587, 
in which the Duke of Joyeuse, one of the favor- 
ites of Henry III., was defeated and killed. 
This was the first pitched battle the Hugue- 
nots ever won, and it made so deep an impres- 
sion upon their enemies, that subsequently the 
very sight of the Protestant soldiers kneeling 
in prayer before joining battle, as they did 
there, struck terror into the heart of the Cath- 
olic soldiers. The Duke of Guise, however, 
defeated the German allies at Vimory and 
Auneau, and they were obliged to leave the 
country. Guise then seized the power of state, 
and marched in triumph to Paris, in spite of 
the orders and opposition of King Henry IH., 
Edict of and compelled him to sign the edict of reunion 
Rouin. ^i Rouin, July 19, 1588, for the forcible sub- 
mission of the Huguenots, and the exclusion 
of Henry of Navarre from the succession to 
the throne of France; and in which he also 
named the Duke of Guise, Lieutenant-General 
of the Kingdom. It now became evident to 
King Henry III. that the aim of Guise was to 
secure the throne for himself, and while the 
King feigned acquiescence, he determined on 
his assassination. In order to gain time, he 
called Parliament to meet at Blois, and per- 
suaded Guise to attend it. Infatuated, as was 
Coligny who fell by his order, the Duke could 
see no danger from the King, although he was 
warned time and again of it. On December 23, 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 59 

1588, the Eong selected nine men from his introa. 
guard and gave to each a poniard, saying; "It 1588. 
is an execution of justice I command you to 
make on the greatest criminal of my kingdom, 
whom all laws human and divine permit me to 
punish; and not having the ordinary means of 
justice in my power, I authorize you by the 
right inherent in my royal authority to strike 
the blow." When Henry of Guise entered the 
council chamber, six daggers pierced his heart. 
He groaned and died. His brother, the Cardi- 
nal, who had encouraged the designs to usurp 
the throne, was heard to say; "I will hold the 
King's head between my knees till the tonsure 
shall be performed at the Monaster^' of the 
Capuchins. '^ He was also assassinated, and 
the remaining brothers fled. The assassina- 
tion of Guise was universally condemned. The 
Universit}^ declared the people free from alle- 
giance to the house of Valois. The King re- 
plied that it was the only means of preserving 
the crown, or his own head. It did not, how- 
ever, bring the King any solace or power. 
His mother, Catherine de Medici, died Janu- Death of 
ary 5, 1589. From the death of her husband, ^^^^ 
Francis II., December, 1560, she had practi- 1589.' 
cally been Regent of the Kingdom. During 
the time, she had hated the Guises, the Bour- 
bons and the Huguenots — her enmities in- 
creasing with her years. Skilled in intrigue, 
unscrupulous in design, of violent passions, 
without moral principle, with great powers of 
persuasion and with quick penetration, she 
used her abilities for mischief, and produced 
a condition of affairs in France, which she 
could not control — the destruction of her de- 
sires and her good name. On her death bed, 
she advised Henry III., "To cease from perse- 



60EISE AND PROGEESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. cuting his subjects and to grant toleration in 

1589- religion. '^ If slie was in earnest in giving 

such advice, she sentenced her life principles; 

and if still dissembling, her ruling passion was 

strong in death. She died unlamented. 

After her death, the power of the League 
party seemed strong as ever. The Duke of 
Mayenne, Guise's brother, entered Paris and 
declared open war against the King; and 
Henry III., after some hesitation, had to throw 
himself, in the spring of 1589, into the hands 
of his cousin, Henry of Navarre. The Poli- 
tique party now rallied to the King, and the 
Huguenots were staunch for their old leader, 
of Navarre. Things looked less dark than in 
the previous summer. 

The Swiss and Germans once more entered 
Northeast Prance, and the Leaguers, unable to 
stand before them and the armies of the two 
kings, fell back on Paris. The defense of 
the city was languid, the populace missing the 
Duke of Guise ; and hence the moderate party 
never extinguished rose with new strength. 

Henry At tMs juucture, wheu all seemed hopeful to 
Assassin- ^■'^^ royalist against the League, Henry in. 

ated. was assassiuatcd, August 1, 1589, by a half- 
witted monk, James Clement. The monk was 
introduced to the king, on the plea that he had 
a letter of importance for him. The King re- 
ceived the letter, and after reading a part of 
it, he arose, when the monk stabbed him in the 
abdomen with a poisoned knife, from whose 
wound he died in a few days. Before he 
closed his eyes and ended the long role of his 
vices and crimes, he commended Henry of 
Navarre to his courtiers as heir to the throne, 
and exhorted him to become a Roman Catholic. 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 61 

Thus did the Orleans branch of the house of i^trod. 
Valois go down in crime and shame ; and dur- 
ing its supremacy of nearly seventy-five years, vaioia 
there was not a single monarch of it friendly ^°J^! 
to the Reformed, but every one shed their 
blood and labored for their destruction. 

At this time the Huguenots had exercise of 
their worship in about 3,500 Chateaux, and in 
about 200 towns, chiefly in the South and 
West. In most parts of the North, except 
Paris and around Rouen and Amiens, they had 
one place for worship in each bailliage. From 
this time the throne of France remained prac- 
tically vacant for about five years. 

The heroism of Henry of Navarre, the loss 
of strength in the Catholic powers, and the 
want of a vigorous head to the League, con- 
tributed to sustain the Bourbon in his arduous 
struggles. The civil wars were not over. 
The Politiques could not at first cast in their 
lot with the Huguenot chieftain, but offered to 
confer on him the title of Commander-in-chief, 
and reserved the question of the succession to 
the throne, giving him to understand that if 
he would become a Roman Catholic, they were 
his. The League party was pledged against 
him. So Henry at first had little more than ciaim- 
the Huguenots at his back. There were other ^^he°^ 
formidable claimants to the throne — Charles Throne. 
n., Duke of Guise; the wife of Philip II., 
King of Spain; and the Cardinal of Bourbon, 
proclaimed as Charles X., for the Guises. 
Against these claimants and his partisan op- 
ponents in the kingdom, Henry of Navarre had 
to wage war and fight his way for five 3^ears to 
the throne. They were the great days of 
Henry of Navarre. He bore himself through- 
out the long struggle at his best. In the life of 



62 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd, the camps, and in the excitements of the bat- 
tlefields and in the flashes of genius with which 
he fought successfully against heavy odds, he 
showed himself a hero, who strove for a great 
cause, that of European freedom as well as his 
own crown. As the conflicts neared their end, 
and he had proven himself master of the situa- 
tion against home and foreign foes, the feeling 
prevailed throughout France that were the 
King of Navarre a Roman Catholic, he should 
be a king of whom all France would be proud. 
He debated the question seriously, and con- 
sulted earnestly with Sully, tlie greatest 
• statesman of the age, who advised him to 
make the change, and the crown would be his, 
and all the affairs of state would eventually be- 
come settled. He at last declared publicly that 
he would perform his abjuration, and named 
the date and the church of St. Denis for the 
ceremony. According to the appointment, 
Sabbath, July 23, 1593, he for the second time 
abjured his Protestant faith for that of Ro- 
Henry ofmauism, and was solemnly crowned as Henry 
^Sn?^ IV., King of France, at Chartres, February 17, 
1594." 1594. That his abjuration was sincere, it is 
impossible to believe ; for he was not only edu- 
cated a Protestant, but was one of the clearest 
heads of his age. More than once he was 
heard to say, with his usual incurable out- 
spokenness, that the step was taken to insure 
Henry's the French crown. And his actions so plainly 
^*ti^n^ coincided with the Protestant faith in all his 
Insincere. foreign policics — opposing Rome, Spain, the 
Catholic League in Germany, and favoring 
England, the Netherlands, the Protestant 
Union in Germany — that it came to be said by 
the opposite party, that the only means of 
preventing France from becoming the head 



THE HUGUENOT WARS. 63 

of Protestant Europe was the assassination of ^°trod . 
the King, which was finally accomplished. 
His abjuration, therefore, was simply an act 
of shrewd policy, many Roman Catholics not 
believing in its sincerity. It had the desired 
effect slowly but surely. The longing for 
peace was strong, and it took the heart out of 
the opposition and seemed to remove the last 
obstacle. The Huguenots little as they liked 
it could not oppose the step, and hoped to 
profit by their champion's improved position. 

On the 12th of December, 1594, Henry held 
an Assembly of the Reformed at Monte, and 
assured them that there would be no change 
of policy towards the Protestants, and prom- 
ised toleration. 

Then followed a war with Spain which con- 
tinued until 1597. As soon as Henry had a ^597- 
breathing spell from that war, he remembered 
his Huguenot subjects, to whom more than 
any he owed his crown, and for whom he ever 
cherished great affection. On April 15, 1598, 
he granted to Protestants the celebrated Edict Edict of 
of Nantes^ which was declared to be "perpet- ^^^^l^' 
ual and irrevocable," and which secured to 
ihem. full loleration in religion. "It consisted 
of ninety-one articles, by which the Huguenots 
were allowed to worship in their own way 
throughout the kingdom, with the exception 
of a few towns; their ministers were to be 
supported by the state; inability to hold 
offices was removed; theii' poor and sick 
were to be admitted to the hospitals; and, 
finally, the towns given them as security were 
to remain in their hands eight years longer.'* 
These towns were about 150, the chief groups 
being in the generalities of Bordeaux (south- 
west), of Montpellier (south), and of Poitou 



64 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. (west); they were either free towns, like 
La Rochelle, Nismes, Montauban, or towns 
belonging to private gentlemen, or towns 
belonging to the king, which had fallen into 
Huguenot hands during the wars. The Edict 
was the most important bulwark of Protestant 
rights. It was registered by Parliament, Feb- 

1599. ruary 25, 1599, despite the influence of the 
Pope against its registration. 

Thus it was that the Huguenots for some 
thirty years had to wage eight separate wars, 
and roll their garments in blood to defend 
their rights, and to secure freedom of con- 
science and full liberty to worship God under 
their own vine and fig tree. It was a sublime 
proof of the sincerity of their religion, tried 
as it were in a furnace of fire. The experience 
was beneficial to them; for it tested their 
principles, purified their temper, and per- 
fected their patience. 

During this period of wars and treaties, 

the Huguenots attended their National Synod, 

Meetings having Presidents, as follows: The third 

Synod. Syuod, at Orleans, April, 1562, Anthony 
Chandieu; at Lyons, August, 1563, Peter 
Viret; at Paris, December, 1565, Nicholas De 
Galars; at Vertueil, September, 1567, De 
L'Este; at La Rochelle, April, 1571, Theodore 
Beza; at Nismes, John De La Place; at St. Fay, 
February, 1578, Peter Merlin; at Frigeac, 
August, 1579, De La Fage; at La Rochelle, 
June, 1581, De Nort; at Vitre, May, 1583, 
Peter Merlin; at Montauban, June, 1594, 
Michael Berault; at Saumur, June, 1596, De 
La Touche. 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 65 

IV. 

The Struggles of the Huguenots from the Edict of 
Nantes to its Revocation, (1598-1685). 

In the Edict of Nantes, Henry IV. made a introa. 
distinction between tlie Huguenots as an 
ecclesiastical body and a political body. Their From 
national political assemblies, which they had^^^^J^^^^ 
been accustomed to hold for the purpose of to its 
defending their civil rights, he positivel.y ^^J^^^" 
forbade in the Edict. To allay, however, 
the discontent which arose among them on 
account of that prohibition he promised 
them verbally that such assemblies might 
continue a series of years, as the means of 
communication between the King and his 
Huguenot subjects. This political privilege 
they enjoyed till after his death, when it was 
abolished. It became customary now to ask 
the King's permission for the meetings of the 
National Synod according to its adjournment, 
and also for those of the Political Assembly. 
With this exception their privileges remained 
unchanged. 

The civil wars were all over, but content had 
not fully returned to the people. As soon as 
the crown was settled on the head of Henry 
IV., there arose to him a most exciting and 
annoying strife for the acquisition of heredi- 
tary estates, offices, and honors, from the 
Leaguers, his opponents to the throne, the 
Politiques, and Huguenots, which last two 
parties felt they had binding claims on him. 
These parties vied with each other, and sought 
to injure the other's claims by all kinds of 
means; and the Politiques and Huguenots, 
who might well feel they had secured the 



66 KISE AND PROGEESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd . throne to him, often thought Henry ungrate- 
1610. ful to his old friends and loyal supporters. 
The strife portended violence and civil war in 
the Provinces, and the King of Spain, ever 
intent on the destruction of the French 
Reformed, sought in every way to excite dis- 
content between the Huguenots and the 
government: at one time poisoning the ear of 
the King and Court with false designs of the 
Huguenots against the throne; at other times 
alarming the Huguenots with false designs of 
the Court to destroy them, and urging them 
to revolt. Every means was used to cause a 
clash between them and the government. But 
through it all, the Huguenots bore themselves 
with patience, and won from the king the fol- 
lowing strong expression of admiration: '*I 
shall never forget that God made use of that 
body to free me from the opposition of Spain, 
to assist me in supporting my just rights, and 
to save even my life from the fury of the 
Leaguers. ^^ The King made himself especial- 
ly obnoxious to the Jesuits, and after frequent 
attempts on his life, he was eventually assassi- 
nated by one of them. The assassination 
occurred during the ceremonies of the corona- 
tion of his second wife, Mary de Medici, as 
Queen Regent of the Kingdom, while he was 
absent engaged in war. The ceremonies were 
set for the eve of his departure; and while 
in the midst of the rejoicings which followed 
the coronation, as the King was riding in his 
carriage through a narrow street. May 14, 
1610, he was stabbed to the heart by Ravaillac. 
AssassiJ^^ the carriage was delayed by a crowd of 
ated. vehicles, the assassin sprung upon one of the 
hinder wheels and plunged a knife into his 
breast three times. The King fell into the 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 67 

arms of two friends riding with him and soon introd. 
expired. Ravaillac had been watching and 
following the king for days and it is said to 
have been the eighteenth attempt on his life. 
Nothing escaped the lips of the assassin to 
criminate accomplices. He was horribly tor- 
tured and then executed. Investigation con- 
firmed the belief that many were planning and 
contriving the event, which was variously at- 
tributed to the Jesuits, to Spain, and to Italy. 
Immediately after the assassination, the 
Queen Regent assembled the council for ad- 
vice and co-operation, and entered the next 
morning on the duties of her office. The burial 
of her husband having been duly performed, 
she prepared for the coronation of her son, as 
King Louis XIII., at Rheims. A new council 
was formed and the old Huguenot financier, 
Sully (appointed 1597), who had laid the 
finances of the kingdom on a firm basis, en- 
riched its treasury, and prepared it for any 
emergency, was retained for a few years; and 
might have remained in office, had he seen 
his way clearly to gratify the Queen's de- 
mands on the resources of the treasury for 
her favorites. His honesty forbade his acqui- 
escence. When she removed him of all power Suiiy 
and command of the finances, she gave him^f^^"^^^ 
charge of the artillery and woods, together Office. 
with the government of Poitou. On one oc- 
casion as he returned from an interview with 
the Queen and her council, to which she had 
invited him, Sully wrote: *'The deceased 
King's government, so wise, so gentle, and so 
glorious to France, was condemned almost 
publicly, and even despised and ridiculed; at 
one time they treated his designs as mere 
chimeras; at another they represented him as 



68 EISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. a weak, and pusillanimous prince, incapable 

1611. of taking any noble resolution. It was not 

enough to leave the death of this great prince 

unpunished; they added to that neglect all 

Sully's sorts of outrages against his memory; and 

^^J®' unhappily for us, heaven, which reserved to 
itself this vengeance, suffered envy and in- 
gratitude to triumph in their success. I 
returned home full of grief at what I saw 
and heard, *We are going, ^ said I, to madam 
Sully, whose prudence I well knew, 'to fall 
under the dominion of Spain and the Jesuits; 
all true Frenchmen, and the Protestants es- 
pecially, must look well to their safety; for 
they will not continue long in tranquility.' " 
"Whether Ravaillac was set on Henry IV. by 
the Jesuits, or by Spain, or by Italy, his knife 
did their work. The Jesuits rose with increas- 
ing power, the King of Spain was relieved of 
anxieties, Italy through the Queen Regent, 
who was an Italian, won great favors, and 
France was plunged once more into confusion 

1611. and trouble; while the Huguenots were left to 
fight for themselves. Eight days after the 
death of her husband, the Queen Mother, in 
the name of the Minor King, ratified the 
Edict of Nantes; and in October, 1611, gave 
another formal declaration bearing on and 
adding forty-five thousand livres to the yearly 
sum of forty-five thousand crowns, granted 
them in the edict; but they were about the 
last favors shown and the last gifts ever made 
them by the crown. Henceforth all declara- 
tions were practically disregarded and vio- 
lated. Unfortunately for the Huguenots, their 
leaders became divided in their political as- 
sembly, held by consent of the Queen Regent, 
May, 1611, at Saumur. In that assembly the 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 69 

question of the coustniction and consequent introd. 
ad7ninistratio7i of the Edict of Nantes was 1612. 
debated with violence and protracted through 
four months. The one party, (courting favor 
with the Queen Regent), contended that the 
Edict should be administered strictly as it 
was recorded; the other, that it should be con- 
strued and administered according to the 
declared will and permission of Henry IV., 
who granted it. The Queen Regent, who felt 
the power of the Huguenots when they were Edict to 
united, took advantage of this division, and ^j^^^^^j^^j 
sent an edict to their National Synod, April synod. 
24, 1612, granting pardon for provincial politi- 
cal assemblies held without permission, and 
forbidding all kinds of political meetings, ex- 
cept those granted by royal permission for an 
expressed purpose, under penalty of punish- 
ment as disturbers of the public peace; and 
also forbidding them to admit into their 
National S}Tiods any persons except ministers 
and elders to treat of their doctrines and 
discipline, under penalty of losing the privi- 
lege of convening the body, and holding the 
Presidents of the S^mod to answer for any 
violation thereof. By this edict the members 
of the Synod at once saw that, as the court by 
intrigue had brought a division among the 
Huguenots in their National Political As- 
semblv, its aim now was to alienate the 
National Synod and the National Assembly. 
The S3Tiod, profoundly distressed by the fore- 
bodings of evil to come from the political 
dissensions among the Huguenots, drew up an 
act of union, in which it said: ''All persons 
are exhorted to labor that the memory of past 
matters be buried in oblivion; that so the 
several humours and diiferent opinions, risen 



70EISE AND PKOGRESS OP HUGUENOTS. 

i ntrod . up in the assembly of Saumur, may be bal- 
anced and composed and allayed; that the 
general desire of the Reformed Churches is 
that affections of those who have been alien- 
ated from each other should be united and 
cemented. " Letters were also ordered written 
to the different parties, exhorting and urging 
them in the name of God to resign their resent- 
ments and discontents. The whole body of 
the Reformed Church was entreated for God^s 
sake, for their own salvation, and for the peace 
and welfare of the nation, to lay aside all 
animosities and to live in peace and in love; 
since their enemies were planning to rura them 
on their own dissensions. 

While the Huguenots were endeavoring to 
have these exhortations obeyed, the Queen 
Mother was negotiating the double marriage 
Marriage contracts between the Young King and the 
^NegoTi-^I^f^^ta of Spain, Anne of Austria, and he- 
ated, tween the Prince of Asturias, eldest son of 
the King of Spain, and the eldest sister of the 
King of France. By such marriages the court 
of France would become united with the 
deceased King's great enemy. Already the 
court of France was under the influence of 
Italian the Popc of Rome, the King of Spain, and the 
atcour?^^^ Italian favorites of the Queen Mother — 
' Concini who had been made Marshal, and his 
wife, Leonora Galigai. At this time there was 
not a single prominent and influential friend 
of the Huguenots at the court. The Roman- 
ists were satisfied with the general politics of 
the court, while all parties were indignant 
that its honors and favors were dispensed by 
the two Italian favorites, and in that respect 
wished for a change. While the affairs of 
state were in this condition, it became evident 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 71 

to the Huguenots that the design of the Pope, introd. 
of the King of Spain, and of the French Court, 1614. 
was to uproot all opposition to Roman Cathol- 
icism, and to establish absolute authority of 
the King over all nobles, provinces, cities, and 
towns, and to use all means, just or unjust, to 
accomplish that end. The man to effect the de- 
sign was not yet even thought of by the court, 
and had not yet risen to the surface in the 
Church of Rome. In 1614, Concini caused the 
young King^s majority, when he was thirteen 
years of age, to be declared by Parliament, and 
then called the States-General to meet in Paris 
the following October. That assembly repre- 
sented faithfully the jealousies and ill-will be- 
tween the orders, and besides the interesting 
fact that Du Plessis-Mornay, a Huguenot, laid 
the grievances of his order before the King, 
they did nothing towards removing from the 
court the obnoxious favorites, Concini and his 
wife, nor towards harmonizing the nobles ; and 
finally broke up in confusion. The Regency 
being ended, the young king, Louis XIII., in 
assuming the reins of government, retained 
the obnoxious favorites; and also ratified the 
Edict of Nantes. The nobles of all ranks ex- 
pressed their disapprobation of the favorites, 
and political matters were now unsatisfactory. 

In 1615, the King married Anne of Austria, 1615. 
marching with an armed force to the borders ^^^^"^2® 
of his kingdom to receive his bride. As his louIs 
march led through the Provinces of the ^"^• 
Huguenots, he took great dislike for them. 

He confined Conde in the Bastile, for his 
open discontent; and many nobles retired 
from court. For two years Concini steered his 
perilous way between the young king, who 
cared little for him, and between the Princes 



72 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. of the blood and the discontented Huguenots. 
1617. In 1617, the king chose a new favorite, Charles 
D 'Albert, Count of Luynes, and ordered the 
arrest of Concini, who resisting the officers 
was immediately slain. Galigai, his wife, was 
executed for treason. The Queen Mother was 
confined to her apartments, and then banished 
to Blois. Shortly after this court revolution, 
the Reformed in their National Synod sent 
congratulations to the King, that his kingdom 
was at peace, and that France had now a King 
worthy to reign and declared, ' ' That next and 
after God, we do acknowledge your majesty to 
be our only sovereign, and it is an article of 
our creed, that there is no middle power 
between God and the Kings." The King 
replied, "Do you continue to serve me faith- 
fully, and you may be well assured that I will 
be a good and kind King unto you, and that I 
will preserve you according to my Edicts.'' 

Political affairs were still hurrying on in 
confusion and distress. The recent royal mar- 
riages had begun to show their effects openly 
to the nation and the world. The old secret 
treaty of Henry II., and Philip I. of Spain, i. e., 
the destruction of the Huguenots, became the 
basis of action, and the great object to be 
accomplished. 

The Queen Mother escaped from her impris- 

Queen oumeut at Blois, and the nobles as little 

Escaped pl^ascd with Luyucs as they had been with 

from Concini rallied in arms around her court at 

Prison, ^jigers, and demanded better treatment than 

what Luynes was showing her. The King 

released Conde from prison to command his 

forces. He soon routed the Queen Mother's 

^®*g°"^^'army and the treaty of reconciliation between 

1620. her and the King was concluded at Angers, 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 73 

1620, by Riclielieu, the Queen Mother's confi- introd. 
dential adviser, whose great abilities had al- 1620. 
ready been recognized, and who by the treaty 
averted civil war. It is said that Luynes in- 
duced Richelieu to bring about a reconciliation 
more favorable to the King than was expected, 
by the promise that he would ask for him a 
cardinal's cap. Luynes induced the young 
king to move against Beam, which was the 
first act of Louis XIII. against the Huguenots. 
The King inherited from his father, besides 
the crown of France, the Kingdom of Navarre 
through his grandmother, Jean D'Albret. 
Spain had seized Navarre, and the Kingdom 
had been reduced to the narrow boundary of 
Beam. The little state had long embraced the 
Reformed faith, where Roman Catholicism 
existed by toleration, and had long been the 
refuge of the persecuted. The project of 
the King was vehemently resisted by Parlia- 
ment, because it imderstood that if an inde- 
pendent kingdom could be deprived of her 
ancient rights no province or city in France 
was safe. It was a step of despotic power 
towards making France a consolidated King- 
dom. The King forced Parliament into meas- 
ures, and collecting his forces, marched for 
Beam in 1620. After compelling the little 
kingdom to yield, he reduced it to a province, conquest 
re-established Catholicism as the official reli- ^^^^^ 
gion, allowed the Reformed religion by tolera- 
tion of the Edict of Nantes, and caused all the 
church property to change hands. The people 
of Beam, however, taking advantage of the 
gentleness and favor of La Force, who was left 
to carry out the King's purpose, reclaimed 
their church property for their pastors; and 
they even proceeded to recover their ancient 



74 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. rights, but the King sent another force and 
1620. had them completely subdued without blood- 
shed. At the political assembly of the Hugue- 
nots at La Rochelle, December, 1620, which 
was an adjourned meeting from Loudon in 
1619, the assembly determined to prepare for 
war, by raising an army, levying taxes, and 
choosing commanders. Bouillon was made 
commander-in-chief; next was Lesdiguieres, 
and so on through a list of able men. But 
Louis Xm. knew there were divisions among 
the Reformed, and did not fear them. He had 
already gained Conde, and was at the time 
holding out inducements to Bouillon and 
Lesdiguieres, and knew they would not fight 
him. Hence when the assembly asked of him 
the privileges confirmed to them by his pred- 
ecessors, Henry ni. and Henry IV., which 
included the liberal construction of the Edict 
of Nantes that Henry IV. gave it, he, irritated 
that they had held that assembly against his 
wishes, replied: "The one acted out of fear, 
and the other out of love; but for my part, 
I wish you to know that I neither love nor fear 
you." Luynes now proposed to take all the 
towns granted in the Edict of Nantes to the 
Huguenots, as the stipulations had been more 
than fulfilled, and there was no need that they 
remain in their hands. The young king and 
his courtiers heartily endorsed the proposi- 
tion. So, leaving Paris early in April, 1621, 
the King issued from Fontainbleau a declara- 
tion against the political assembly at La 
Rochelle as rebellious, and announced his pur- 
pose of visiting the disturbed provinces, and 
promised protection to all Huguenots who 
War. kept their allegiance. Luynes held the office 
of Constable in the army, and Lesdiguieres 



HUGUENOT STKUGGLES. 75 

was Lieutenant under him. The Huguenot i ntrod . 
Assembly prepared to meet the King^s forces; 1621. 
and appointed Saubize, Rohan, La Force, and 
others as commanders, reserving to itself 
paramount authority. The King and his 
army marched against Saumur, where Du 
Plessis-Mornay being in charge, was assured 
by the King that the visit was wholly a 
friendly one, and that all the immunities of 
the town would be preserved inviolate. Ac- 
cordingly, as was the custom on the King's 
visitation, Du Plessis withdrew the forces 
from the citadel, and encamped them without 
the town. The royal train entered May 17, 
1621, and having taken possession, the King 
announced that Saumur would be retained as 
a military post for himself, and placed a 
garrison in the citadel. It was a dastardly 
piece of deception, practised on an honest, 
noble and brave Huguenot, who stands today 
next to Coligny in Huguenot history. For T^ken.'^ 
implicit faith imposed in his King, Du Plessis 1621.' 
had to retire and spend the remnant of his 
days in privacy and comparative poverty, until 
death came two and a half years later, when 
he was in the seventv-fourth vear of his a;re. 

From Saumur the King passed on to 
Poictou, and the provinces farther South, call- 
ing on the towns in his path which were held 
by the Huguenots to open their gates to him, 
which they did; and all the military defenses 
of the Huguenots in his route were subdued. 

The designs of the King were now fully 
comprehended. The Huguenots saw that he 
had provoked them to take up arms for the 
purpose of declaring them in rebellion, that he 
might have cause to seize their fortified towns 
by duplicity and otherwise. One of the towns 



76 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. was held by Saubize, and it defended itself 

1621. for about a month, and on surrendering was 
almost reduced to ruins. At the town of 
Clanoc, the pastor, with his father, father-in- 
law, and other citizens were publicly executed, 
and a part of the garrison murdered in cold 
blood. At Montauban the success of the 
King^s army was arrested. That garrison was 
defended with great skill and vigor by La 
Force and Count De Ovval, who repulsed all 
the assaults of the King and Lu}aies. Be- 
coming discouraged, the royal forces kindled 
watch fires in their camp, as if preparing for 
a nightly assault, and then stole away before 
their movement was discovered. Luynes, cha- 
grined at the failure attributed to his want of 
generalship, and fearing the loss of the King's 

Death of favor, languished with camp fever, and died 
Luynes. near the end of 1621 ; over whose death the 
Eling did not grieve, for he had grown weary 
of him. 

The King passed the winter without a favor- 
ite, or a master. 

There were now two parties in the court, 
that of the Queen Mother, upheld by Riche- 

1622. lieu, and that of the Prince of Conde. The 
^wan^ King leaning towards the latter which wished 

for war, began a second campaign against the 
Huguenots early the next spring (1622), and 
conducted it with greater cruelty than the 
former one. During the winter, the inhabit- 
ants of Negrepelisse massacred the royal 
garrison of 400 men located there in one night. 
When the King came to them in the month of 
June, he put the entire population to the 
sword. Fourteen days later, the Huguenot 
garrison at St. Anthoneis, because of their 
gallant defense, were all murdered, and the 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 77 

women of the town were all violated. In the i ntrod . 
month of September, the King reached Mont- 1622. 
pellier, and began a siege which lasted six 
weeks. Becoming discouraged, and fearing a 
failure as at Montauban, he appointed Les- 
diguieres to treat with the Duke of Rohan f orTreaty of 
peace; and a treaty was signed in camp, Mont- 
October 9, 1622, of which the Edict of Nantes ^ ' 
was made the basis. Catholicism was declared 
the official religion; political assemblies were 
treasonable, if held without consent; and all 
politics and political discussions were for- 
bidden in the religious courts of the Reformed. 

The King by his army had now established 
the strict construction of the Edict of Nantes, 
which Lesdiguieres and Bouillon had con- 
tended for in the political assembly at Saumur 
in 1611. Lesdiguieres was rewarded with the 
office of Marshal of the Kingdom, and for Death of 
about four years he enjoyed the honor of being gu-gfes. 
second in power in the kingdom. He died 
September 28, 1626, in his 84th year. 

During the year 1622, Richelieu receivedRicheiieu. 
from the Pope the CardinaUs hat, and was now 
ready to take charge of, and to rule the weak 
and unstable King. In 1624, he was made a 
member of the council. Louis XIII. needed 
his great abilities, but instead of loving him, 
he trembled for the influence he might wield 
over him, the court, and the kingdom. Still, 1624. 
recognizing his abilities, and himself wearied 
out with the cares of government that were 
encroaching on his freedom and enjoyment, 
the King with great hesitation at last deter- 
mined to throw the weight of government on 
Richelieu, and made him, April 9, 1624, Coun- 
cillor of State. Richelieu's first desire in his 
high office was the destruction of the Re- 



78 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. formed French Churcli. He accordingly paid 
1625. little attention to the stipulations of the treaty 
which the King had made with the Huguenots, 
and provoked them to rebellion by all possible 
means. In 1625, while the government was 
involved in difficulties in Italy, the inhabit- 
ants of La Rochelle prepared for war, trusting 
to their strong fortifications and maritime 
advantages. The Duke of Rohan commanded 
their forces on land, and the Duke Saubize 
their naval interests. The royal forces were 
commanded by Marshal De Themines. The 
royalists waged war lightly against La Ro- 
chelle, but heavily in the southern provinces, 
carrying desolation and terror among the 
unwalled villages, while the Huguenots of 
the middle and northern provinces were undis- 
turbed. The naval force under Saubize beat 
the royal marine in several engagements, and 
Peace Richelieu with foreign complications brewing 
°i62?^' ^0^^*^^ himself under the necessity of offering 
conditions of peace, in 1626, which it is said 
the Huguenots refused to accept. 

Richelieu's next move against the Hugue- 
nots was to reduce La Rochelle. A powerful 
army was raised, and marched against it, 
Richelieu commanding. The Huguenots of 
the stronghold defended themselves with great 
fortitude and bravery for more than a year, 
during which length of time the population of 
the city was reduced from 15,000 to less than 
5,000 by famine and disease. But with ample 
means and forces at Richelieu's command, the 
resistance of the siege was in vain. Even 
three fleets which the English induced Charles 
I. to send to the relief of the city, had to return 
without effecting their object. Finally, Riche- 
lieu, having expended all his energy and 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 79 

strategy, and worn out with the siege himself, introa. 
was glad to propose liberal terms of surrender. 
He promised amnesty, free exercise of the 
Reformed religion, and the restoration of all 
property to the citizens. The terms were ^^^of 
accepted, and on the 28th of October, 1628, Rocheiie. 
Richelieu rode into the city with King Louis ^^28- 
Xin. at his side, followed by the royal army. 

An Edict was promulgated, declaring the 
independence and privileges of La Rocheiie 
ended; Catholicism was made the official 
religion; the great church was seized for a 
cathedral; the fortifications of the city, ex- 
cepting those towards the coast, Avere all 
erased, every ditch was to be filled up, and not 
a wall was to be left even for a garden. The 
fall of La Rocheiie was the death blow to 
the Huguenots as a political power. All 
their other strongholds — Nismes, Montauban, 
Castres, etc., soon fell and they were left 
defenseless. 

Richelieu, however, manifested a tolerant 
spirit and did not oppress them. 

In 1629, the Edict of Pardon was issued, ^^^.^^^^^ 
granting the same privileges of the Edict of Pardon. 
Nantes, with the exception of the strongholds 
which had been destroyed. 

The Huguenots now ceased to wield politi- 
cal influence, and became distinguished as a 
party only by their religion. At no other 
period were they more intellectually active. 
Charenton, which was near Paris, became the 
center of a powerful religious and philosoph- 
ical influence that made itself felt in the 
capital, and at the royal court. The number 
of their eminent writers and preachers was 
great. In different parts of the kingdom not 
less than six theological schools had been 



80 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. established, of which those at Saumur, Mon- 

^^'^^' tauban, and Sedan were the most important. 

Deatnsot Richelieu died December 4, 1642, and was 

^^'^and^'^ succeeded by Mazarin. In about five months 

Louis afterwards. May 14, 1643, Louis XIII. died, 

Lou?3 ^^^ -^^s ^^^' when his minority was passed, 
XIV, was crowned, Louis XIV. His mother, Anne 
^^g°s* of Austria, was Queen Regent for eight years. 
The same rights and privileges were granted 
the Huguenots under this new regimen, but as 
usual were disregarded. Having lost their 
political influence, they suffered a general loss 
of nobles, who went to the Roman church. 

From the Edict of Toleration in 1598 to 
1659, the Reformed held fifteen meetings of 
Meetings their National Synod, with Presidents as 
Sym)a. follows: At Montpellier, March, 1598, Pastor 
Berault; at Gergeau, May, 1601, Monsieur 
Pacard; at Gap, October, 1603, Daniel 
Chamier; at La Rochelle, March, 1607, Mon- 
sieur Beraut; at St. Maxaut, May, 1609, Mon- 
sieur Merlin; at Privos, May, 1612, Daniel 
Chamier; at Vitre, May, 1617, Andrew Revit; 
at Alez, October, 1620; at Charenton, Sep- 
tember, 1623, Monsieur Durant; at Castres, 
September, 1626; at Charenton, September, 
1631, Metrezat, Pastor of Paris; at Alancon, 
May, 1637, Benjamin Basnage; at Charenton, 
December, 1644, Pastor Dulincourt, of Paris; 
1659- and after an interval of fourteen years, the 
Synod, twenty-niutli and the last National Synod was 
held at Loudon, November, 1659, Pastor 
Daille, President. 

Mazarin, who permitted the holding of the 

last Synod, intended that it should be the last. 

Spirit of The spirit of that Synod was such as should 

syn^od. I'^scome the last sessions of the highest judi- 

* catory of the Reformed French Church. 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 81 

There were manifested in its deliberations no introd. 
murmurings, lamentations, threatenings, re- 
pinings, no compromises, and no giving up of 
rights and privileges. Everything was digni- 
fied, mild, and resolute. 

Cardinal Mazarin broke the visible bond of 
union of the French Reformed Church, and 
left it to hold together as it had done a century 
before by a common faith, a common worship, 
a common discipline, a common Catechism for 
their youth, a common confession of sound 
words, and a common Bible. And in a little Death of 
more than a year afterwards, Mazarin himself Mazarm. 
died. 

The vetoing of the National Synod was to 
the Huguenots ecclesiastically, what thenuguenot 
downfall of La Rochelle was to them politi- suffer- 
cally — the beginning of the end of their 1662'. 
religious rights in France. New Edicts soon 
followed, which were intended to damage their 
financial interests, and to impede the free 
exercise of their religion. Tn 1662, they were 
forbidden to bury their dead except at day- 
break or night-fall. 

Ln 1663, new converts from the Reformed 1663. 
Church were excused from payment of debts 
previously contracted with their fellow-re- 
ligionists. In 1665, their boys, at the age of 1665. 
fourteen, and their girls at twelve years of age, 
were allowed to declare themselves Roman 
Catholics, and their parents were either to 
provide for such apostates, or apportion them 
a part of their possessions. In 1679, converts 1679. 
who relapsed into Protestantism were to be 
banished, and their property confiscated. In 1680. 
1680, Huguenot clerks and notaries were 
deprived of their employments; and mar- 
riages of Protestants to Roman Catholics were 



82 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. forbidden, and their issue declared illegiti- 
1681. mate, and incapable of succession. In 1681, 
Huguenot children might become converts to 
the Catholic religion at seven years of age, 
which was followed by a great kidnapping 
process by the priests, and parents were sub- 
jected to heavy penalties, if they ventured to 
complain. Orders were issued in some parts 
of the kingdom to destroy the Huguenot 
churches; and as many as eighty were torn 
down in one diocese, and the pastors, who held 
services amid their ruins, were compelled to 
do penance with a rope around their necks, 
and then banished the kingdom. Protestants 
were prohibited from singing Psalms in their 
homes or dwellings, and on land or water. 

Blow rapidly followed blow. In short, they 
suffered from the pettiest annoyance to the 
most exasperating cruelty. They offered no 
resistance. All that they did was to meet and 
pray God to soften the heart of the King 
1683, towards them. In 1683, Colbert, minister of 
state, died. He had tried hard to prevent the 
hardships laid on the Huguenots by the King, 
who was urged on by his Jesuit confessor, 
Pere la Chaise, and his mistress, Madame de 
Maintenon. Colbert saw that the strength of 
the states consisted in the number, intelli- 
gence, and industry of such citizens as the 
Huguenots were. After his death, military 
executions and depredations began through- 
out the kingdom. Bodies of troops were 
quartered upon the Huguenots to harass them, 
and make converts of them. These troops 
passed through the southern provinces, com- 
pelling the inhabitants to abjure their religion, 
destroying their churches, and murdering 
their preachers. Hundreds of thousands, who 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 83 

would not abjure, fled to Switzerland, the introd. 
Netherlands, England and Germany. The less. 
dragoons placed on the frontiers to prevent 
their escape were in vain. Many made an 
insincere abjuration, who, on the slightest ap- 
pearance of relapse, were put to death. When 
it now became apparent that the Huguenots 
were no longer within the pale of the law, then 
Roman Catholic mobs arose against them. 
They broke into their churches, tore up the 
benches and burned them, along with the 
Bibles and Hymn Books, and the authorities 
conniving at such proceedings banished the 
burned-out preachers, and forbade further 
worship in such churches. 

Pity, terror, and anguish had agitated the 
minds of the Huguenots, until they were 
finally reduced to a state of despair. Life was 
made almost intolerable to them. 

At the last, all hope vanished when the 
King, Louis XIV. signed, on the 18th and Revoca- 
published on the 22d of October, 1685, the ^^"J^^ 
Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. Its enact- Edict of 
ments have been briefly summed up as fol- n^"^^®^- 
lows: "The demolition of all the remaining 
Protestant temples throughout France; the 
entire proscription of the Protestant Reli- 
gion; the prohibition of even private worship 
under penalty of confiscation of body and 
property; the banishment of all Protestant 
pastors from the kingdom within fifteen 
days; the closing of all Protestant schools; 
the prohibition of parents from instructing 
their children in the Protestant faith; the 
obligation, under penalty of a heavy fine, of 
having their children baptized by the parish 
priest, and educating them in the Roman 



84 RISE AND PROGRESS OF HUGUENOTS. 

introd. Catholic religion; the confiscation of the prop- 
1685. erty and goods of all Protestant refugees who 
failed to return to France within four months; 
the penalty of the galleys for life to all men, 
and of imprisonment for life to all women 
detected in the act of attempting to escape 
from France." 

The Eevocation was a proclamation of war 
by the armed against the unarmed — a war 
against law-abiding and helpless men and 
women — a war against property, against 
family, against society, against public mo- 
rality, and more than all, against the rights 
of conscience. It brought perilous times. 
Thousands of the Huguenots took their lives 
in their hands, as they attempted to leave 
home, property, loved ones, and escape to 
Holland, Switzerland, England and Germany, 
which threw open their doors to them and 
gave them hearty reception. All the Protes- 
tant lands of Europe were glad to enrich their 
trade and manufactures by the accession of 
the most intelligent and industrious classes 
of the French population. The name ' ' Hugue- 
not,'' having acquired an honorable associa- 
tion, became a passport to favor. A great 
many suffered death before they would abjure, 
and others submitted. 

Number The total number of those who refugeed 

Refugees "fi'om France has been estimated from 300,000 
to 400,000, and as many, it is supposed, per- 
ished in prison, on the scaffold, at the galleys, 
and in their attempts to escape. Only a year 
after the Revocation, Vauban wrote that, 

Financial << France had lost 60,000,000 of francs in specie, 
^°'^- 9,000 sailors, 12,000 veterans, 600 officers, and 
her most flourishing manufactures." All in- 
dustries languished; the cultivation of the soil 



HUGUENOT STRUGGLES. 85 

was almost abandoned; and in many parts of introd. 
the kingdom, towns and large districts were 
depopulated. France became a huge hospital 
without provisions, and more than a century 
passed before it was restored to its former 
prosperity: a providential retribution and 
natural penalty for the wrongs and cruelty 
inflicted upon the Huguenots, who contended 
for the exercise of simple, conscientious prin- 
ciples of religious faith. And it has been 
published that, in 1870, no less than eighty- 
nine of their descendants returned to France, 
as officers of the i7ivading German army: — "As 
thou hast done, it shall be done unto thee ; thy 
reward shall return upon thine own head." 
And the end of retribution, for such diabolical 
cruelty perpetrated upon innocent and con- 
scientious subjects, is not yet. 

Addendum. Since this article was com- 
pleted the French Parliament, January 3, 
1907, amended the Church and State Separa- 
tion law of 1905, which was signed by the 
President and promulgated. Elections since 
have shown that the people are with their 
representatives; that government and people 
are determined upon the separation of Church 
and State, after a more or less close reunion of 
fourteen centuries. The act places all Catho- 
lics, Protestants, and Jews throughout the 
Empire on the same footing, and after the 
lapse of centuries gives final victory to the 
contention of the Huguenots as to the relation 
of Church and State, and their right to wor- 
ship their God as their consciences might 
dictate. 



CHAPTER I. 

BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

The Huguenots at the time of the Revocation of the 

Edict of Nantes. 

Chap. I . At the time of the Revocation of the Edict 
1685. of Nantes, the Huguenots were living in all 
parts of France. It may be safely affirmed 
that there was not a Province in the king- 
dom which did not contain firm adherents to 
the Reformed faith. They were most numer- 
ous, however, in the southern, western, and 
northwestern portions. About a hundred and 
seventy years of trial and persecutions had 
been endured, since the famous James Lef evre 
had sown the first truths of the Reformation 
in the renowned University of Paris, which 
was the radiating center of the whole country. 
During that long period the doctrine of justifi- 
cation by faith in Christ alone had been work- 
ing like leaven, and permeating hearts all over 
the land, despite the rigor of persecution per- 
petually waged to stamp it out, in disregard of 
royal edicts. 

Hence it might be expected in so great 
lapse of time, when generation had succeeded 
generation and had inherited the faith and 
principles of their ancestors, and families had 
become widely dispersed, to find the Hugue- 
nots in all parts of the country. Further- 
more, as the truths of the Reformation had 
been originally disseminated in the Univer- 
sity, and embraced by university men, these 
truths had been maintained and circulated all 
that long while by the better classes of the 
kingdom. The Huguenots were always com- 



THE NAME DUPUY IN FRANCE. 87 

posed mamly of the nobility and middle chap. i. 
classes, with few adherents from the lower 
class. About one-third of their strength was 
from the nobility — gentlemen of letters, chief 
burgesses of cities, wealthy families, and sol- 
diers of rank and long experience. Some of 
the noblest families of France have been those 
whose names adorned Huguenot history, and 
for centuries prior to the Reformation, their 
names had become famed for distinguished 
services. 

One of these old-famed French names is 
Dti Puy. It is mentioned in the history of 
the country in the eleventh century, and was 
found in the southeastern section. In that 
locality is Le Puy, 270 miles a little southeast 
of Paris, and the capital town of the depart- 
ment of Haute-Loire, province of Languedoc. 

In the 10th century it was called Podium LePuy. 
Sanctae Mariae, whence Le Puy. It sent the 
flower of its chivalry to the crusades in 1096. ^g^"^g 
Joining Haute-Loire on the northwest is the 
department of Puy de Dome, province of 
Auvergne. 

Both of these departments are in the high- Origin of 
est mountainous region of France and as it puy » 
was from that section the name Du Puy first 
appeared, in two words, in history, the topog- 
raphy of the country must have given rise to 
the name — ''Du,'' meaning, "of the,'' and 
"Puy" (old French), meaning, "mountain." 

Louis Moreri (1643-80), a French historian, 
says: "Du Puy is an old house, prolific of 
illustrious men. It is almost certain it had 
its origin in France." 

It was in 1033, that the two Burgundies of 
France, frequently called the kingdom of 



88 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chapel. Aries, after various vicissitudes, became 
finally united to the German Empire by 

Raphael Conrad II. Conrad appointed Raphael Du 
"^"''•Puy, who appears to have held the offices of 
Commander of the Roman Cavalry, and 
Grand Chamberlain of the Roman Republic, 
as one Governor of the conquered Provinces 
of Languedoc and Dauphiny, in southeast 
Prance. It does not follow from this, that 
the name is not of Prench origin, as claimed 
by Moreri, for Raphael Dupuy might have 
been, and no doubt was, a real Prenchman. 
The name also appears in literature as 
"Raphael de Podio.^' He became quite re- 
nowned in that whole section of the country. 
His tomb was opened in 1610. The corpse 
was found lying upon a marble table, with his 
spurs on one side, his sword on the other, and 
with a helmet of lead on his head, bearing on 
a copper plate the following: "Raphael de 
Podio, General de la Cavalerie Romaine, et 
Grand Chambellan de I'Empire Romaine.'' 
His descendants became possessors of many 
Hugo fine estates. His son, Hugo (called also Hugh 

DuPuy. ^j^^ Hugues), a Prench Knight of Dauphiny, 
joined the crusaders in 1096, under Godfrey 
of Bouillon, Duke of Lorraine, for the re- 
covery of the Holy Land from the Moham- 

sons of medans. This man, Hugo Dupuy, had four 

Du Pu° ^^^S' Alleman, Rodolphe, Romaine, and Ray- 
* mond. The last three accompanied him in 
the crusades. Rodolphe, the second, to whom 
Godfrey gave many lands in Palestine, fell in 
battle. Romaine, the third son, died in pos- 
session of the principalities Godfrey had given 

Knights him. Raymond, the fourth son, in 1118, suc- 

faiiSs. ceeded Gerard De Martigues as rector of the 
Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem, and was 



THE NAME DUPUY IN FRANCE. 89 

tLie first to assume the title of Grand Master chap. i . 
of the Knights Hospitallers. This order 
derived its name from a hospital in the city of 
Jerusalem, consecrated to St. John the Bap- 
tist, and its object was to receive and care for 
the needy and sick visitants of that city. 
After the establishment of the kingdom of 
Jerusalem by Godfrey of Bouillon, the hos- 
pital acquired larger revenues than were 
requisite for the relief of the poor and sick, 
and Raymond Dupuy about 1120, with his 
brethern, offered to the king of Jerusalem to 
make war upon the Mohammedans at his own 
expense. The king and Roman pontiffs ap- 
proving the plan, the order then partook of a 
military character, and its members were di- 
vided into three classes — Knights, or soldiers of 
noble birth, whose business was to fight for re- 
ligion, priests, who conducted the religious 
exercises, and serving brethren, who were 
soldiers of ignoble birth. The order exhibited 
the greatest feats of valor; twice repulsed the 
advancing Turks; was supported by landed 
property in all parts of Europe, and acquired 
immense wealth, under the auspices of Ray- 
mond Dupuy, who died in 1160. 

The badge, which all the crusaders wore on Badge of 
their right shoulders, was the sign of the ^^^^^ 
cross, made of white, red, or green woolen 
cloth, and solemnly consecrated. That badge 
not only gave rise to the name Crusade, but 
it also indicated that the enterprise was to 
rescue the cross of our Lord from the hands 
of the Mohammedans. The shield which the 
Dupuys bore in that enterprise, was adorned shields, 
with a red rampant lion, with blue tongue and 
claws, upon a field of gold. The shield of the 



90 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I . Knights of St. John of Jerusalem was adorned 
with a cross of silver, upon a field of red. 
When Raymond Dupuy became Grand Master 
of that order, and it assumed a military char- 
acter, according to the custom of chivalry, he 
chose for the adornment of his shield the 
two quartered, i. e., two lions and two crosses. 
Coats of As yet, no decided traces of Coats of Arm^ 
'^""^' have been discovered among the early cru- 
saders. It was not until the 13th century 
that they came rapidly into use, not acquiring 
a fixed character until the middle of the 14th, 
and prevailed until about the close of the 15th 
century; after which they became merely 
ornamental and genealogical escutcheons, as 
emblems of rank and family, and marks of 
gentle blood. When such insignia did arise, 
i. e., in the 13th century, the adornment dis- 
played on the shield of the Dupuys of the 
crusades was then adopted as a Coat of Arms, 
with the addition of lion supporters and a 
ducal crown for a crest, and the motto, 
^' Agere et pati forte virtute nan genere vitay 

But by what Dupuy, or of what branch of 
them it was adopted, and whether regularly 
handed down from generation to generation, 
is not known. Moreover, according to the 
laws of Heraldry, governing the hereditary 
transmission of a Coat of Arms, the eldest son 
alone could fall heir to it, which in earliest 
times he was allowed to change by a label. 
The younger sons could not adopt the paternal 
Coat without a material change, called in 
heraldry a ''difference.'' These laws, regu- 
lating the transmission of the Coat forced a 
vast multitude of such arms, which finally 
necessitated the appointment of commissions 



THE NAME DUPUY IN FRANCE. 91 

of visitation throughout the country, whose C hap. i . 
duty was to decide upon their lawful author- 
ity. Still more, such escutcheons sprung up 
under rank rule and domination of Roman 
Catholicism, but when in the 16th century 
some descendants in Languedoc of the early 
Dupuys became adherents to the Reformed 
Religion, there is no evidence that they ever 
set any store by such things, and least of all 
is there the slighkst evidence that the one of 
whom this volume treats ever laid any claim 
to a Coat of Arms. In addition, a careful 
perusal of the laws of Heraldry will convince 
any lover of truth and honesty how absurd it 
is for the descendants of Bartholomew Dupuy 
to lay any rightful claim, in this late day to a 
special Coat of Arms, which was framed 
about six hundred years ago. And they should 
aspire to claim, 

"No forged tables 
Of long descent, to boast false honors from." 

From one or another of the foui* sons of 
Hugo Dupuy, the crusader, have descended 
all the Dupuys of this country, whose ances- 
tors were identified with the reformed religion 
of France. We know there were no less than 
five Huguenot Dupuys, who immigrated to 
this country and j^robably there were more, 
among the several thousands of French refu- 
gees, who found homes of peace in these parts 
of America. 

Two brothers, Nicholas and Francis Dupuy, Nicholas 
fled from Paris in the fifties of the 17th cen- ^nd 
tury, and during the next decade they em- Dupuy. 
igrated to America, and settled in the state 
of New York, where some of their descend- 
ants still reside. Dr. Richard B. Faulkner, 



92 BAKTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTOEY. 

Chap. I . of Pittsburg, Pa., is a gt.-gt.-gt.-gt.-gt.-grand- 
son of Nicholas, who married Cataline de 
Vaux. His brother, Francis Dupuy, married 
Gertie Williams Boenem. 
Dr. John Another progenitor was Dr. John Dupuy, 
Dupuy. ^]^Q settled in New York City, an immigrant 
from Port Royal, Jamaica, British West 
Indies, an immigrant from England, where he 
studied medicine, an immigrant, with his 
father, John, from Prance prior to 1700, and 
driven out of the country by the Revocation 
of the Edict of Nantes. It is claimed that he 
descended from Raymond Dupuy through 
some fifteen or sixteen generations. His 
Dupuy descendants are not very numerous, 
since only one male descendant of several gen- 
erations had issue. (See Appendix.) 
Francois The name, Francois Dupuy, appears among 
Dupuy. -tiiQgg of i\jQ early settlers of the Parish of 
King William, at Manakintown, Va., but 
there is no trace at this time of living descend- 
ants from him. 
Barthoio- The progenitor, Bartholomew Dupuy, of 
D™puy. ^hom this volume treats, descended from 
Alleman, the oldest son of the Crusader, Hugo 
Dupuy. He was in all probability bom in the 
province of Languedoc about the year 1652. 
His grandson. Rev. John Dupuy, Jborn 1738, 

writes in 1814, "My grandfather 

was born in France about the year 1650 or 
1653.^' The former date is a little early, and 
the latter a little late to harmonize with the 
well established division of years in his after 
life. Besides the statement is by no means 
definite. The most reliable and definite 
statement, the author has ever seen on the 
subject, is that recorded by Mr. Ebenezer 
Dupuy, a great grandson, born 1791, who 



BAKTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN FEANCE. 93 

wrote, ''Bartholomew Dupuy was bom in c hap. i . 
France in tlie year 1652." As that is a defi- 
nite statement, and nicely coincides with his 
after life, we accept it as the most reliable, 
understanding that it does not settle the ques- 
tion beyond doubt. By virtue of his descent 
from the nobility, Bartholomew Dupuy heired 
the honorable title of ''Count." The Province 
in which he is claimed to have been born was a 
stronghold of Protestantism. Its adherents 
shortly before the Revocation of the Edict of 
Nantes exceeded two hundred thousand; and 
in many of its towns they outnumbered the 
Roman Catholics. In no other part of France 
did the Reformed Religion flourish more re- 
markably than in the important province of 
Languedoc. When Bartholomew Dupuy was 
eighteen years of age, he enlisted in the French 
army as a common soldier and served fourteen Eniist- 
years, during which time he was in fourteen dentin 
pitched battles, besides skirmishes and also ^^^' 
duels. His fidelity and bravery in the army 
won for him the admiration and confidence of 
King Louis XIV., and in the meanwhile he 
was promoted to be Lieutenant, and trans- 
ferred to the King's household guards. 
While in that service, he was frequently sent 
on important and recruiting services, when he 
received Captain's pay, and was provided 
with a written pass containing the King's 
signature, which prohibited any one from 
molesting his progress. The simple exposure 
of the King's signature was often sufficient 
for the guards stationed throughout the king- 
dom to let him pass, for many of them could 
neither read nor write. About the year 1684, Retire- 
he retired temporarily from the King's ser- ™?°*- 
vice, and purchased the fine old chateau of Komt. 



94 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

C hap. I . Velours, a country mansion, having a vine- 
yard. It was near Royan in the province of 
Saintonge, which had received the truths of 
the Reformation as early as 1534, and at the 
time of the Revocation the Mass had become 
practically a thing of the past most generally 
throughout it. The strongest of all the 
Huguenot strongholds, La Rochelle, was in 
the northern part of this province. As Royan 
is situated on the right bank of the river, 
Gironde, his home was not far from the At- 
lantic coast. It was a delightful section of 
the country in which to reside; -pleasantly 
watered by brooks, and shaded by fine 
trees down to the steep rocky shore, with a 
charming neighborhood, composed almost ex- 
1685. clusively of Protestants. In the year 1685, 
^^"'^^®' (Ebenezer Dupuy writes), he married Sus- 
anna Lavillon, a young countess of noble 
standing and of the Huguenot faith. The 
author has thought for years that her surname 
might have been "Levilain," and that she was 
a relative of John Levilain, one of the early 
settlers at Manakintown, Va., for the orthog- 
raphy of proper names at that time was very 
bad. However, as he has no clear and relia- 
ble testimony to that effect, and as the name 
''Lavillon" has been preserved in history, and 
is a family name among the descendants, it is 
still reserved. 

In retiring from the King's service, Bar- 
tholomew Dupuy did not lose the least of his 
Majesty's favor, and although a professed 
Huguenot he also held the regard and esteem 
of the Romish priest, the cure of the Parish. 

Before the Revocation of the Edict of 
Nantes, he was informed by a messenger from 
the King, of what was preparing for the 



BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN FRANCE. 95 

Huguenots, and was urged to abjure his Prot- Chap. i. 
estantism, and to rely on the favor of the 
King for future promotion. And when the 
Edict was revoked, he with his household was 
protected from arrest and molestation by an 
Amnesty from the King containing the King ^s Amnesty, 
signature, which amnesty he used in making 
his arrangements and in effecting his flight 
from the country. A graphic account of the 
experiences, which he and his wife passed 
through the short time they remained in 
France after the Revocation, and of the 
manner of their escape in December, 1685, as 
well as the condition of affairs in that country 
at the time, is well portrayed in " The Story of 
a Hu^^ue7tot' s Sivord^' which was published 
in " Harper ^s New Monthly Magazine,'^ of 
April, 1857: the authorship of which article 
is assigned in the Magazine's Index to John 
Esten Cooke. By consent of Messrs. Harper 
and Brothers of New York, the article is well 
worthy of incorporation in this volume, 
thereby preserving it among the old progeni- 
tor's descendants. 

Its statements are declared to be substan- 
tially correct, and there are many old letters 
preserved among the descendants, which go to 
confirm much of The Story, relative to this 
Huguenot. 

The Story op a Huguenot's Sword. 

(Derived from Authentic Papers and Tradition.) 

/. — A Relic. 

At the residence of a gentleman in the connty a Relic, 
of Prince George in Viruinia, a descendant of one 
of those noble and devoted men wlio fled from 
France, giving up all in preference to abjuring their 



r 



96 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTOEY. 

C hap. I . faith, * may still be seen an ancient relic of strange 
A Relic, interest to the student of the Past, and no less 
curious, from the history connected with it, to the 
general reader. 

The relic in question is an ancient and battered 
sword of singular appearance. It is triangular, 
with something of a spear-like form, and not ex- 
ceeding three feet in length. The workmanship is 
plain, and the old brand seems to have been in- 
tended far more for actual bloody use than mere 
ornament. The original scabbard has been long 
since lost, and that into which the weapon is now 
thrust was picked up on the battle-field of Guilford, 
and from its silver mounting and peculiar work- 
manship, must have belonged to a British officer, 
who lost or threw it away in the engagement. The 
father of the gentleman who now possesses the 
weapon used it with good vigor in the battle men- 
tioned, and it drank the blood of more than one 
enemy of the American cause. This Avas, however, 
no new thing for the ancient and battered weapon. 
Manuscript and tradition in the owner's family 
establish clearly that the original wearer used the 
sword in fourteen pitched battles and a number of 
duels. On two continents it had thus been wielded, 
and we are assured, ''always with honor," in a 
worthy cause. 

It is "a passage in the life" — so to speak — of this 
singular sword that we are about to narrate — a de- 
tached series of events which befell one of its wear- 
ers, leaving out the bloody battles in Europe, and 
the field of Guilford, where it was used in another 
struggle. This narrative will embrace a portion of 
the family history of two of the worthiest houses 
of our Virginia of to-day — the Fontaines and 
Dupuys. In giving thus much attention to the sub- 
ject, we shall not be throwing away our time or 
trouble, for everything relating to this noble race of 

*Among the Huguenots who fled to Virginia were the Flour- 
noys, Meauxs, DuVals, Maryes, Boudoins, Latines, and others. 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 97 

men is full of interest, and includes a lofty moral. C hap. I . 
The Huguenots were of the best blood of France — AReUc. 
the flower of the nobility, the middle classes, and 
tlie commons. The infusion of this element into 
the Anglo-Saxon stock has enriched and strength- 
ened it, still further fertilizing, as it were, by a 
foreign substance, the originally vigorous soil. 

The singular romance of the subject will always 
render it one of deep interest, and the following 
brief narrative possesses this attraction. It scarcely 
differs in any degree from actual fact, and where 
this difference occurs, it consists almost wholly in 
the grouping of the incidents; otherwise the history 
is true to the letter, and derived exclusively from 
well-authenticated documents. The whole relation 
is no less valuable than interesting, teaching as it 
does a lofty philosophy, and displaying the heroic 
texture of the noble men of that period — a period 
which brought out, perhaps, as much moral beauty 
and strength as any other in the history of the 
world. 

//. — A Meeting of Huguenots. 

It was about six o'clock in the evening on Palm a 
Sunday of the year 1684, immediately preceding Meeting 
the revocation of the celebrated "Edict of Nantes," Hugue- 
which had granted religious toleration to the Prot- nots, 
estants throughout the kingdom of France. 

Under the drooping boughs of the little wood 
of Chatelars, near Royan, in the province of Sain- 
togne, about a dozen men were assembled, clad in 
plain dark garments, and displaying in every linea- 
ment of their determined countenances that heroic 
devotion to duty, in the teeth of danger, which char- 
acterizes the loftiest natures. These men, who were 
Huguenots, had been engaged in religious services, 
conducted bv one of tlieir number, whose dress 
seemed to indicate either that he was a minister, 
or at least was a candidate for ordination. 

He was a man of about twenty-five or six, with a 
countenance of great personal beauty, and his bear- 



98 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chapel, ing ^as that of a gentleman of rank and position. 
A His flaxen peruke fell around rosy cheeks, from 
Meeting which a pair of blue eyes, filled with resolution, 
Hugue- s;hone with a serene and tranquil radiance, 
nots. Immediately beside him stood another individual 
in appearance equally striking. He was about, 
thirty years of age, apparently, lofty of stature, and 
with the eagle eye of one born to command. Be- 
neath his dark cloak, which he wrapped closely 
around him, was seen at times the uniform of an 
officer in the Royal Guardsmen of his Majesty 
Louis XIV., and around his w^aist was buckled a 
short triangular sword. 

After the termination of their devotions, the 
Huguenots drew together around the trunk of an 
immense oak ; and for about half an hour exchanged 
earnest and cautious conversation. The discussion 
seemed to turn upon the best mode of proceeding 
to be adopted by the rural population of Protestant 
faith. The chief disputants were the young min- 
ister and an elderly gentleman, who seemed to 
counsel a moderation which was distasteful to hia 
companion. 

"But, Messire Mouillere," said the young min- 
ister, in an impassioned whisper, "are we always to 
be slaves? Are we to bow our necks to the yoke, and 
go at the bidding of a king's mistress to worship 
the gods of Baal? For one, I say, sooner would I 
perish! At least, we shall die like freemen I" 

"But, my dear Messire de la Fontaine," said the 
other, in the same tone, "what can we do? It is but 
submission to the storm as it passes ; involving no 
denial of faith." 

"No denial! an abjuration such as soon will be 
forced upon us, no denial !" 

"At least, there are many excellent men who 
preach non-resistance." 

"Yes!" said Fontaine, with a sudden rush of 
blood to his cheeks, "yes! and this preaching has 
brought upon us all our woes !" 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 99 

"Would you counsel resistance to his Majesty, C hap. L 
Messire — armed resistance?" ^ 

"I would — and I would appeal to the Lord of Meeting 
Hosts, to the God of Battles, for the rest ! Ah, Sire °^ 
Mouillere! how long shall we be forced to hear nots^' 
these arguments — to listen to these views? I say 
to you that our forefathers consented to lay down 
their arms, because religious toleration was con- 
ceded to them ! I say that it is a miserable breach 
of faith in his Majesty to revoke that edict ! I say 
that I, for one, candidate for the ministry though 
I be, am readv to buckle on mv sword, and abide 
by the issue, whether life or death !" 

A murmur of applause greeted these passionate 
words, and for a moment there was silence. 

"But," persisted Mouillere, shaking his head, 
"you forget that the poor people of the province 
have not your resolution ; they have no means to 
fly in the event of defeat; they — " 

"Will die at least with arms in their hands, not 
be dragooned to death in spite of their abjuration !" 

Subdued by the enthusiasm of his opponent, or 
finding the struggle too much for him, INIessire 
Mouillere did not reply. For a time no sound dis- 
turbed the silence, but the sighing of the wind in 
the huge branches overhead, and the suppressed 
breathing of the assemblage. At last this silence 
was broken by the gentleman who concealed be- 
neath his cloak the uniform of the king's guards. 

"I am of the opinion of Messire Jacques de la 
Fontaine," he said, in a deep voice which he made 
no effort to moderate. "I think that the time has 
come to preach and practice resistance! resistance 
to the death I I take my place by ;Messire de la 
Fontaine, and I will take the chances of the cause- 
life or death !" 

"Thanks! thanks!" replied Fontaine. "I recog- 
nize there the true blood of Dupuy. Messire 
Barthelemi, I salute you." 

" 'Tis no time for compliments," replied Messire 
Dupuy, "and 1 see that we can not at present come 



100 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

C hap. I . to any decision. I therefore propose, friends, that 

A we break up our meeting, to assemble again at such 

Meeting place and time as shall be agreed on." 

Hugue- ^ murmur of approbation replied to the words — 

nots. and in a moment all were kneeling before Messire 

Jacques de la Fontaine, who offered up a passionate 

and strangely eloquent prayer. 

It was a singular spectacle, that of these men 
thus kneeling beneath the branches of the great oak 
of the forest, upon which the shades of night were 
rapidly descending; praying to One beyond the 
stars for succor. Their cathedral was the gloomy 
Avood, with its gnarled and knotted trunks; their 
organ the low wind that began to moan in the 
branches ; their light the stars that began to twinkle 
like a million lamps in the drooping canopy above 
them. And yet we know that He who looks to the 
heart alone was listening, that the prayers of 
Jacques de la Fontaine reached the throne of 
Heaven. 

Ere long the last place in which the Huguenots 
had assembled was deserted — the last footsteps had 
died away — a solemn silence reigned in the forest, 
unbroken by the fall of a branch or the note of a 
bird. 

"Aha! are you there?" came suddenly from the 
wide boughs of the great oak ; and descending with 
the agility of a cat, the spy who had uttered these 
words stood upon the ground. 

"Aha!" he repeated, looking cautiously around 
with his cunning eyes. "As sure as my name's 
Agoust, advocate, I'll string you, one and all, for 
this. Ah! my birds! my good Huguenot traitors! 
jou shall swing for this ere you're a month older !" 

Suddenly, however, the spy seemed to reflect 
upon what had escaped his attention. 

"I forgot," he said. "I lost sight of my advocate- 
ship ! An advocate to turn spy — in a tree ! Really 
that won't do ! Come, my dear Messire Agoust, let 
us see if you can not legally, honorably, and inci- 
dentally behold these traitors and their doings !" 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 101 

With which words the spy-advocate commenced C hap, i . 
running rapidly along a by-path, which led in the ^ 
direction taken by the Protestants. Meeting 

He soon issued from the wood, and entered, „ ^^ 
through the back door, a small house situated upon nots. 
the main road, though somewhat removed from it. 
Hastening to the front window, which commanded 
a view of the highway, he uttered an exclamation of 
satisfaction. 

Messire Jacques de la Fontaine and Barthelemi 
Dupuy were passing, with locked arms, in earnest 
conversation. Ere long they disappeared in the 
half light of evening, still making gestures, and 
conversing with animation. The spy-advocate took 
out a small book, and with his pencil made a memo- 
randum. 

"Aha ! my good Messires !" he said, with a chuckle 
of triumph, "I shall give information presently to 
Messire the Procureur du Roi, and, I rather think, 
shall be a witness on your trial! Ah, miscreants! 
you reprimanded me for abjuring, did you, and 
said that I deserved to be degraded from the roll, 
eh? Well, we shall see who gets the better of the 
present affair, my good Messires Fontaine and 
Dupuy! Yes, we shall see!" 

With these words the advocate chuckled again, 
and softly lowered the window from which he had 
been gazing. 

III. — The Trial of Jacques de la Fontaine. 

Our narrative refers mainly to after events, and Trial of 
we can not enter into the details of what fol- J^ques 
lowed the assemblage of Huguenots in the wood of Fontaine. 
Chatelars. Still we can not refrain from briefly 
noting the courageous bearing of Fontaine on his 
trial. 

He was arrested, with others, on the information 
of the man Agoust, and, under convoy of a troup 
of "archers," taken to the town of Saintes, where, 
amidst furious cries of "Hang them! hang them!" 



102 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I . from the Catholics, and lamentations from the 
Trial of Protestants, they were thrown into prison. Dupuy, 
jaques for some reason, had not been arrested ; his position 
Fontafne.^^ the king's guardsmen probably exempting him. 

Immured in the loathsome prison at Saintes, 
Fontaine's courage did not fail him, and he pre- 
served an equanimity which excited the astonish- 
ment of his companions. The poor prisoners re- 
garded him as their only hope, and he continued 
incessantly to encourage and confirm them in their 
faith, praying, exhorting, and comforting them. 

The trial came at last before the Seneschal of 
Saintogne, and to the charges brought against him 
Fontaine replied with a legal acumen and boldness 
of bearing which excited in his adversaries mingled 
emotions of rage and astonishment. Pushing aside, 
with a haughty gesture, the ignominious stool upon 
which criminals were forced to seat themselves, he 
wrung from the profligate judge permission to sub- 
ject the testimony against him to a rigid cross-ex- 
amination; and this sifting process he persevered 
in, spite of threats, curses, and fury on the judge's 
part. Instead of awing him, this proceeding aroused 
Fontaine's anger; haughtily confronting the Sen- 
eschal, he threatened him with impeachment, and 
half from amazement, half from fear, his demands 
were complied with. 

Under this exhausting examination, the main 
witnesses vainly endeavored to sustain themselves. 
They stammered and foreswore themselves. 

"How far was I from your house in passing?" 
he asked of Agoust. 

"About a musket-shot." 

"And yet you swore but now that 'twas at the 
dusk of evening!" said Fontaine, extending his 
hand toward the trembling advocate. "Miserable 
wretch that you are! was it not enough that you 
should deny your baptism, and renounce your re- 
ligion yourself, but you must also employ false testi- 
mony to put temptation in the way of them whom 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 103 

God has sustained by his grace? Now look at your Chap, i. 
own statement and give God the glory." 

"At least I thought it was you!" stammered jaq^ue°s^ 
Agoust, turning pale. deia 

"Write that down !" said Fontaine. Fontaine. 

The Seneschal declared it should not be done. 

"Very well," said Fontaine, coldly; "then I de- 
clare to you that I will not sign my confrontation." 

Trembling with rage, but yielding to the threat 
which would have nullified the entire proceeding, 
the Seneschal complied. 

"But you held illegal assemblies in prison !" cried 
the prosecutor. 

"You are wrong, Sire Avocat," said Fontaine, 
ironically ; "the Grand Provost and his archers are 
to blame for that — not myself. Just order the 
prison doors to be opened, and I take it on me to 
disperse the assemblage without loss of time." 

The Seneschal here broke out with rage, and or- 
dered the archers to convey the prisoner to his 
dungeon. 

"If you think, Sire Seneschal," said Fontaine, 
hauglitily, "to prevent my calling on my Creator by 
putting me in a dungeon, you are very much mis- 
taken! The greater my affliction, the more im- 
portunate will be my prayers ; and when I call upon 
God I will not forget to pray for you, that you may 
repent, and that He will give you a better mind." 

"I want neither your prayers nor your lectures!" 
cried the furious Seneschal ; "away with you !" 

He was led back to his dungeon. 

But deliverance came ere long. Dupuy, the 
guardsman, never rested until his friend's case was 
before Parliament, and this enlightened body ad- 
ministered a severe rebuke to the Seneschal, and 
ordered the release of the prisoner. 

At the door of the Town Hall, after his release, 
Fontaine met and embraced his friend. 

"Come to my chateau, Jacques," said Dupuy. 
"Y'ou think the struggle is over; friend, we have 



104 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. not seen the beginning. The King has fully deter- 
mined to repeal the Edict of Nantes. You start! 
Take care, that is treason ! come with me." 

IV. — llie Captain of Dragoons. 

The The brief scenes wliick we have related, taken as 
of Dra° tliey are from actual history, are interesting, as 
goons, presenting a picture of the times immediately pre- 
ceding the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. We 
have seen how the smouldering fires of hatred in 
the minds of the Catholic populace sent out, as it 
were, sparks and jets of flame — proving that the 
fire-brand of hereditary hatred was not extin- 
guished, only covered with a thin coating of ashes. 

We are now to see the breaking forth of the fire 
in all its fury; the rush of the devouring flame 
which burned up all toward which the royal breath 
directed it. The events which we have narrated oc- 
curred in the spring and summer of 1684. By the 
autumn of 1685 all was ripe, and soon the infamous 
decree revoking the edict of toleration was thun- 
dered from Paris throughout the whole of France. 

Before, there had been simply ill feeling, and a 
disposition to annoy the Protestants, among the 
baser classes of their enemies; a state of things 
which Fontaine's arrest and trial truthfully dis- 
played; now, however, all had changed. In Oc- 
tober, of the year 1685, there was the bloody and 
determined purpose, armed with all the power of 
the royal edict and the loyal troops, to massacre 
every Calvinist, whether man or woman, boy or 
girl, who did not publicly abjure the Protestant 
faith, and receive the sacrament at the hands of a 
priest. 

There was no delay — no time given to escape. 
With the passage of the edict commenced the hor- 
rible persecution. Like thunder following a flash 
of lightning came the terrible dragonnades — those 
forays of ferocious dragoons into every town, and 
hamlet, and chateau — cutting, burning, slaying, 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 105 

rioting — holding orgies from a mere contemplation Chap. I. 
of which every heart must recoil in horror and dis- The 
gust. Intoxicated with blood, these men seemed Captain 
to have lost their senses in the sensual and devilish goons." 
career of murder — like a victorious army in the 
enemy's country, they gave free rein to their brutal 
and bloody instincts — torture and death seemed to 
precede them and follow in their wake like blood- 
hounds. As to the unfortunate people upon whom 
they were let loose, the Huguenots, they no longer 
assembled even in the forests — the ten thousand 
spies which swarmed in every village would have 
given information, and the meeting for prayer 
would have terminated in blood. 

The troops descended like an avalanche upon the 
province of Saintogne, and with the sword in one 
hand, and the sacrament in the other, cried, "Ab- 
jure! abjure! partake of the host, or prepare for 
instant death!" These dragoons had fixed days 
for the "conversion" of every district, and on these 
days they fell upon it, took possession of the Prot- 
estants' houses, turned the parlors into stables for 
their horses, and treated the owners with monstrous 
cruelty — beating them, burning some alive, half 
roasting others, and then letting them go — securely 
tying mothers to the bed-posts, and leaving their 
sucking infants to perish at their feet — hanging 
some upon hooks in chimneys, and smoking them 
with wisps of wet straw till they were suffocated — 
dipping others in wells — binding down others and 
pouring wine into their mouths until they died — 
exhausting everywhere the direst cruelties, and all 
in the name of Christ! 

This is the picture which an eye-witness of the 
dragon uades has drawn; let us now see what fur- 
ther befell the personages of our history. 

At the window of a small chamber, high up in 
the turret of an old chateau, crowning a gentle ac- 
clivity, and looking on a beautiful landscape, sit 
two men of notable appearance — tliose wliom we 
have first presented to the reader. They have 



/ 



106 BARTHOLOMEW DUPLY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. changed but little, save that a species of cautious 
~^ watchfulness characterizes their demeanor, and 
Captain they are somewhat tliinner. From time to time 
ofDra- they direct keen glances toward the highway lead- 
goons, ijjg ^^ ^j^g village, and upon a bridle-road, disap' 
pearing in the bright foliage of the forest. 

"Ah, well, Barthelemi," says Fontaine, with a 
deep sigh, "at last the moment has come when I 
despair for France. Yes, all is lost!" 

"I told you as much a year ago, Jacques," replies 
the soldier, "and you would not believe me. Do 
you remember your arraignment for the assemblage 
in the woods of Chatelars — our meeting in the 
Town Hall, when that villain, the Seneschal, op- 
pressed you — do you remember these pleasing 
events?" 

"Yes," said Fontaine, gloomily. 

"Well, Jacques," continued the soldier, "you 
doubtless remember further, that at the time of 
your trial you were full of noble sentiments about 
the justice of the King, the power of the laws ; you 
had an abiding faith in '^confrontations/ 'recolle- 
ments/ 'factums,' and all the jargon of the courts. 
I really admired you when, with head erect, and 
flashing eyes, like Brutus or Aristides, you launched 
at the worthy Seneschal the tremendous threat that 
you would not sign your confrontation! Yon 
thought that you had vindicated the eternal ma- 
jesty of justice. Justice ! Bah ! W^ho speaks of law 
or justice? Justice!" continued the soldier, gloom- 
ily, "where are now all the grand ideas you clung 
to in spite of me? Where are your confrontations, 
and recoUementsf His majestic Majesty has ex- 
tended his royal hand, and not one of your legal 
forms remain! You were blinded by your sim- 
plicity and singleness of heart. You did not con- 
ceive the possibility of blood, and torture, and 
murder! You did not foresee that, in a twelve- 
month, vou would see in France onlv a flock of 
sheep slaughtered by wolves ! I >saw it all ! I saw 
it coming, and now it comes! Yes, it comes! It 



STOEY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 107 

is on us! The monstrous oppression of a dotard, Chap. I. 
ruled by a vile old woman, grinds us into the very ^^ 
earth beneath the iron heel of a brutal soldiery! Captain 
Your confrontations and processes are a miserable of Dra- 
dead-letter! We are in the midst of the dragon- ^°°°^" 
nadesF^ 

The tone of the speaker was so earnest, and in- 
stinct with such gloomy passion, that a shudder 
ran through his companion's frame, and uncon- 
sciously his eyes turned toward the highway. 

"Yes, I understand," continued Dupuy, with 
gloomy coldness, "you look for them! you know 
what they are ! you are counting the moments while 
they delay. See! there is the signal of their ap- 
proach !" 

The soldier pointed as he spoke to a house em- 
bowered in woods at the distance of half a league, 
from which a dense smoke began to rise, succeeded 
almost immediately by flames, which darted from 
the windows and wrapped the whole edifice in their 
mortal embrace. 

"Sire Mouillere's, is it not?" 

"Yes, and you will soon see his wife and children 
flying on the highway, if the dragoons have not 
dashed their brains out on the lintel !" 

"Oh, my God!" said Fontaine, raising his eyes 
to heaven, with gloomy sorrow. "Why hast thou 
deserted us? What terrible crime have we com- 
mitted, that thou dost strike us with thy thunder- 
bolt?" 

"I will tell you," said Dupuy, even more cold 
and gloomy. "Our crime has been a folding of the 
hands to sleep, a criminal inertness, non-resistance, 
cowardice ! You ask ; I tell you. We have refused 
to grasp the weapon God held out to us, and we 
are lost!" 

"All is not lost !" cried Fontaine, starting to his 
feet and grasping the hilt of his sword, with flash- 
ing eyes. "At least the combat is still possible." 

"And death," interrupted his companion, in a 
freezing tone. "You are right — death docs remain 



108 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. to US ; luckily they can't deprive us of that con- 

ZT' solation !" 
Captain "Death ! yes, death !" cried Fontaine, with flushed 
ofDra- cheeks. "But we'll sell our lives like men, and 
s«^°^ dearly!" 

"Jacques," said Dupuy, whose iron visage never 
once relaxed as he gazed cooly at his friend, "you 
really did mistake your vocation when you studied 
for ordination. You were born for a soldier, and 
next to praying, I believe your greatest pleasure 
would be mortal fighting. Therein you differ from 
me. I don't like it ; I am weary of it. Do you see 
this old triangular sword? It has been in fourteen 
pitched battles, equally divided between myself and 
the Seigneur, my father, whose soul may God re- 
ceive! and in numerous single combats. I have 
fought a good deal for his majesty. King Louis 
XIV., and I'm tired. You wish to advance — to 
charge the dragoons. You are bloody-minded. I 
am the contrary, am decidedly a coward. Do you 
know what I wish to do?" 

"Speak!" 

"I wish simply and solely to escape — to fly — to 
leave this detestable France, dead in her trespasses 
and sins, to never more set foot upon her cursed 
soil." 

"Leave France!" 

"In one week I shall go. I regret the delay; but 
I have a little scheme of getting some of that rascal 
Agoust's gold for my estate, and, to my sorrow, I 
must delay." 

"Go !" said Fontaine ; "fly ! desert the cause when 
we still have arms! when we may die defending 
our rights !" 

"Well, you can stay," said Dupuy, coolly. "I, for 
one, however, really object to being cut down by 
a set of rascally troopers, or, worse still, broken on 
the wheel. Look !" said the speaker calmly ; "there 
are our friends, the dragoons, coming. In ten min- 
utes you will be tied to a horse's tail and made to 
abjure or murdered." 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 109 

"Never!" cried Fontaine, drawing his sword; "I Chap.i. 
will die before I am taken!" "^^ 

"And your niece you love so — your betrothed?" Captain 

"Oh, my God!" cried Fontaine; "what madness o^^^^- 
has possessed me?" goons. 

And sinking down, he buried his face in his 
hands. 

"Yes, I will fly with you," he said, raising his 
head suddenl}^, "wherever you wish — anywhere! 
Life to me has no longer anything in it to render 
it desirable. Were it the good pleasure of the Lord 
I would gladly lay down my miserable existence, 
and, d^ing so, forget the degradation of my coun- 
try. I will fly, then ! Speak ! where shall I go with 
my poor child-niece and my betrothed?" 

"Good," said Dupuy, coolly; "I will tell you to- 
night. At present we have to deal wiUh the dra- 
goons. Here they are." 

As he spoke, the company of dragoons, headed 
by an officer clad in a nmgnificent uniform, thun- 
dered into the court of the chateau. Ferocious, 
Avith heavily bearded faces, and blood-thirsty ex- 
pressions, these men were fit instruments for the 
work they were sent to do. They lost no time, and, 
at a sign from the officer, half a dozen leaped from 
their horses and struck heavy blows upon the 
portal. 

Dupuy took a small key from his bosom, inserted 
it into a hidden orifice of the wainscoting, and the 
door of a secret closet flew open. Into this he 
pushed Fontaine without ceremony. 

"But you — your family," said Fontaine, strugg- 
ling to issue forth again, 

"I'll take care of that," said Dupuy, coolly. 
"Don't fear, companion. Just keep quiet. And 
now I must go. Those rascals are breaking down 
my door." 

With these words Dupuy shut the door of the 
closet, and descended the staircase with the firm 
tread of a soldier who knows no such sentiment 
as fear. 



110 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I: The great dining-room of the chateau presented 

-pjjg an appearance which was not calculated to please 

Captain the Owner. The rude and brutal soldiery were strid- 

of Dra- ijig through the apartment, tossing about the f urni- 

^ °°^' ture with contemptuous indifference, and lounging 

on the fine tables and delicately-carved chairs, 

which cracked beneath them as they fell rather than 

sat upon them. 

On a handsome couch, carved in the fashion of 
the day, now known as Louis Quatorze, the captain 
of the dragoons had stretched himself carelessly, 
his spur tearing the rich covering at every move- 
ment of his foot. 

Madame Dupuy, who, before her marriage, had 
been the beautiful Countess Susanne Lavillon, 
stood pale and trembling at the door; and to the 
frightened lady the officer was addressing rude 
questions in relation to the whereabouts of her hus- 
band. With these questions he mingled various 
remarks which were meant for gallantrv ; but anv- 
thing more grossly insulting and unworthy than 
these words could scarcely be imagined, as the leers 
of sensual admiration of the dragoon were the per- 
fection of disgusting brutality. 

This was the scene which Messire Barthelemi 
Dupuy beheld as he advanced into the apartment. 
A sudden pallor of the cheek, and a flash from the 
dark, haughty eyes, greeted the spectacle; but these 
evidences of emotion instantly disappeared, and 
his face returned to its expression of iron coolness 
and calmness. 

y. — The Adversaries. 

The "Good-morning, Messire Jarnilloc," he said; 
Adyersa-apg^jly ^^ unexpected pleasure this visit. It was 
kind in you to recollect an old comrade and bring 
your friends with you." 

The officer half rose from the couch, and said, 
sullenly, 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. Ill 

"Don't appeal to me, or think our former ac- Chap. i. 
quaintance will serve you. You are in my district, ^^ 
and I did not come to trifle." Adversa- 

"I am pleased to hear it, Captain," replied "®^ 
Dupuy, with the same coolness. "Will you state 
your errand? But, first, may I request you to ask 
your friend with the red beard there not to break 
the door of my buffet? If it is absolutely necessary 
to his happiness that he should see my silver, I will 
furnish him the key." 

"Dupuy," cried the officer, coloring with rage at 
his opponent's disdainful calmness, "I did not come 
here to trifle ! And if my men are unceremonious, 
it is because no ceremony is demanded toward such 
as you." 

Dupuy inclined his head, without removing his 
eyes from the face of the dragoon, and seemed to 
wait for a further communication. 

"You are a heretic !" cried the dragoon, working 
himself into a rage to hide his embarrassment and 
shame ; "I arrest you !" 

"A moment, if you please. Sire Jarnilloc," replied 
Dupuy, haughtily. "You will do nothing of the 
sort." 

"How! you dare to resist I you dare!" 

"Sire Jarnilloc," said Dupuy, "we served to- 
gether in Flanders, and you know me well enough 
to understand that I am not often afraid without 
reason. I do not regard it as a very daring thing 
to resist you, and tlie gentlemen under you — armed 
as I am with what you are bound to respect," 

"Armed ! then you have armed your household ! 
You have laid an ambush ! Soldiers, to the rescue !" 

"Really, my dear Captain Jarnilloc," said Dupuy, 
without moving, despite the advance of the sol- 
diers, "you will make me think that you are afraid. 
Your troop is then really going to charge a single 
man, with no arms but his short sword. Is that 
your purpose, Captain?" 



112 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. "My purpose is to arrest and have you shot!" 
^jjg cried the enraged dragoon — "you, and all your 
Adversa- household !" 
"es. ''Scarcely." 

The calm word seemed to drive the officer to fury. 

"The ropes there !" he cried to one of his soldiers ; 
"the ropes to tie this Huguenot to my horse's tail ! 
I'll drag him every step of the way to Saints !" 

"Me!" said Dupuy, haughtily. "'^ 

"Yes, you ! you, and your pale-faced wife, "who 
makes me sick !" howled the officer, pointing Dupuy 
out to his men — "Seize him !" 

"Back!" said Dupuy, laying his hand upon his 
sword. "I have that which you dare not disregard !" 

"Will you obey me?" shouted the dragoon to his 
men, who hesitated to advance upon the collected 
Huguenot. A movement was made to seize Dupuy, 
whose sword sprang from its scabbard. 

"Sire Jarnilloc," said he, "it seems that you hesi- 
tate to do what you desire — leaving the arrest of 
a single man to your troop. Well, Sir, I repeat 
that you will not arrest me — the hardiest of your 
troopers will not obey you — for I have the safe- 
guard of their master and yours." 

With which words Dupuy held a strip of parch- 
ment toward the officer. It contained the simple 
words : 

"THESE to our trusty and well-beloved, Barthelemi Dupuy, 
one of our guardsmen, who has an amnesty granted him, with 
all his household, until the first day of December: any annoy- 
ance of the said Seigneur Dupuy will be at the peril of the oflBcer 
who commands it. Such is our royal will, and, moreover, we pray 
our said trusty friend Dupuy to abjure his heresy, and return to 
the bosom of the Holy Church, in which alone is rest. 

"Done at Versailles this 30th October, in the year 1685. 

"LOUIS. 

"To the Seigneur Barthelemi Dupuy. at his chateau of Velours 
in Saintogne — these, in haste — Ride!" 

This was what Messire Jarnilloc read, crumpling 
the parchment in his hand furiously. When he 
came, however, to the signature and seal, he bowed, 
sullenly, and handed back the parchment. The 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 113 

command of Louis XIV. was that of a divinity. No Chap, i. 
man in the realm, however great and powerful, ever -j-jje 
dreamed of disobeying it. Adversa- 

"You are right, Sir," said the dragoon, muttering "®^' 
like a hyena disappointed of his feast; "I have no 
more to say, except that there is nothing in the or- 
der of his Majesty forbidding a search for other 
heretics, not of your household." 

"Search," said Dupuy, coldly. 

It was done, but no one found — the hiding-place 
of Fontaine being perfectly concealed. The soldiers 
passed and repassed in front of it, without susfiect- 
ing for a moment how near they were to their prey. 

In a quarter of an hour Jarnilloc sounded to 
horse, and the troop clattered out of the courtyard. 

"I will visit you again upon the first day of De- 
cember, cursed heretic that you are !" cried the dra- 
goon, shaking his clenched hand at Dupuy. "I'll 
yet lick your blood !" 

"I regret that your birth prevents my giving you 
an opportunity at present, in single combat, Mes- 
sire Jarnilloc," was Dupuy's reply, with a bow, 
which made Jarnilloc nearly faint with rage. 

"One of the canaille, really," said Dupuy, as he 
turned to his wife; "but now — to work — action!" 

VL—Two Pistol Shots. 

Dupuy dropped a heavy bar, to which a chain Two 
was affixed, across the door, and then turned to his ^^^^^ 
wife. 

The expression of his countenance was absolutely 
ferocious. The assumed calmness with which he 
had encountered the captain of dragoons gave way ; 
and his frame shook with rage. Extending his 
hands, he seemed unconsciously to clutch at some 
weapon; and almost a shudder of fury convulsed 
the muscles. 

The strong and burning hands were imprisoned 
in two little white ones, as soft as down : the neck, 
with its swollen and distorted arteries, was clasped 



114 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chapel, by t^o snowy arms, which drew the head of the 
Two soldier down to the dear woman's face. 
Pistol "There ! there ! Barthelemi," said the lovely lady ; 
"do not agitate yourself further, nor think of those 
words this rude man addressed to me. Remember 
that they soil only himself — that they have not in- 
jured me." 

Dupuy did not reply. With clenched teeth and 
gloomy visage he bent his eyes upon the ground — 
and it was a long time before his wife could extract 
even so much as a word from him. 

At last the rage of the soldier seemed to yield to 
gloom; his arms no longer hung at his side. Tak- 
ing to his bosom the dear companion of his life, he 
pressed her to his heart in a long embrace, and 
leaned his head upon her sunny hair. 

"You are right, Susanne," he said; "you always 
are. Y'es, I should not regard this brutality of a 
wretched adventurer; and 'tis only because I can 
not punish him that I am half out of my senses. 
A sense of peril restrained me — thanks be to my 
heavenly Father that I did restrain myself. I have 
only one more prayer — 'God make me the instru- 
ment of thy vengeance on this man' — right or 
wrong, I pray it." 

"Oh, forget him, Barthelemi; he is a poor slave 
of passion." 

"Had he touched your robe I should have slain 
him where he stood ! But I boast. Ah ! the day will 
come! but now to action! Kiss me, wife. God 
keeps a blessing for me still, in you ; a blessing un- 
speakable." 

And Dupuy pressed a kiss upon the forehead of 
the beautiful woman, and hastily ascended to the 
apartment in which he had held the conversation 
with Fontaine. 

He was soon released ; and the two men remained 
in animated and close converse until the shades of 
evening began to fall. They then rose. 

"So it is all arranged, then," said Dupuy; "'tis 
the only path open, and I shall follow in four days.'* 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWOKD. 115 

"Come with us — come!" Chap. i. 

"No, I should not be a true husband. My wife -j^q 
shall not want in a foreign land, and I must wait Pistol 
so long. But you must go. Set out at once to bring Shots, 
your companions; I will ride part of the way with 
you." 

They hastened down, and just as the darkness 
descended, mounted their horses. Fontaine was 
armed to the teeth, and rode a black Arabian, the 
finest of his stud. He led another horse by the 
bridle. 

Madame Dupuy embraced her husband and his 
friend, courageously bade them God-speed, and they 
departed in silence. 

A short ride brought them opposite the house of 
the unfortunate Mouillere. It was only a smoulder- 
ing ruin; and within a few paces of a dying fire, 
made of broken furniture, some drunken troopers 
were sleeping. They had been left to keep watch 
for any heretics who lurked near, and had embraced 
the opportunity of getting drunk. 

Within ten feet of these miscreants lay the dead 
body of Messire Mouillere, and beside him the 
corpses of his wife and her infant child. The body 
of the lady was half naked, and shockingly burnt; 
the babe had been killed by the blow of a horse- 
man's pistol. The drunkenness of blood was needed 
in addition to that of wine. 

The two men reined in their animals for a 
moment, and gazed with heaving bosoms upon the 
terrible scene. Hatred mounted to Fontaine's 
countenance, like a black shadow. Taking from his 
belt a pistol, he cocked it, and set spur to his horse, 
with a hoarse cry, which sounded like the roar of 
a lion. 

Dupuy caught the bridle, however, and threw the 
animal upon his haunches. 

"You prevent my vengeance upon these mon- 
sters!" cried Fontaine; "you stop me in executing 
justice !" 



116 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. "I stop you from committing the act of a mad- 
Two man," said Dupuy, with a suppressed shudder. 
Pistol "The report of that pistol will send you to the gal- 
Shots. iQT^^g^ ^sfit]l all you love!" 

Fontaine uncocked the weapon, murmuring, "The 
sword, then !" 

"No ; leave their punishment to Heaven. In due 
time, God will strike them." 

"Who goes there?" cried one of the troopers, 
staggering to his feet, and leveling his pistol at the 
horsemen. The challenge was followed by the dis- 
charge of the pistol, to which Fontaine's replied 
like an echo, and the trooper fell forward mortally 
wounded. 

"Come!" said Dupuy, "there is not a moment to 
be lost. In ten minutes we shall be intercepted !" 

"Good !" said Fontaine. "At least one devil less 
soils the earth." 

And the two horsemen put spurs to their animals, 
and disappeared like shadows, just as the country 
side began to be alive with shouts and galloping 
drasroons. 



*^o^ 



YII.—The Wounded Wolf. 

The Half an hour before daylight, on the same night, 
i^undea^jjg gateway of Dupuy's chateau was cautiously 
opened, and Fontaine rode in, accompanied by 
three females. 

The two who rode the spare horse were Anne 
Boursiquot, the betrothed of Fontaine, and her sis- 
ter, Elizabeth Boursiquot. Before him, upon the 
pommel of his saddle, Fontaine bore his little niece, 
Jeannette Forestier. 

The women were received in the outstretched 
arms of Dupuy and the Countess, and the foaming 
horses were led away to the stable. 

"Welcome! welcome!" said Dupuy. "Thanks 
be to Heaven that you have safely passed the patrol 
and sentinels. Did you meet any?" 

"Yes," said Fontaine; "and at one moment I 
thought I should have to send the women on, and 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 117 

sell my life as dearly as possible. But a cloud swept chap. i. 
over the moon, and we gained the forest before they ^^ 

could stop us.-' Wounded 

"Good! Heaven watches over us," said Dupuy, Wolf, 
raising his eyes to Heaven. 

"And my little Jeannette," he continued, caress- 
ing the hair of the girl, "she bears herself bravely, 
and her roses have not fled. But come, friends, to 
your apartments; you will need all the sleep you 
can obtain, for the journey to the sea-shore will 
consume the whole of to-morrow night." 

The females departed with Madame Dupuy, and 
the friends drew together and earnestly discussed 
their plans — Fontaine moistening his dry lips with 
wine. 

"All is now ready, then," said Dupuy, at length ; 
"you will set out to-morrow at nightfall, and by 
daylight you will be beyond pursuit, and not far 
from Tremblade, upon which the dragoons have 
not yet descended. You will go to the house of 
Master Beltonnet in the town, communicate with 
my friend, Captain Johnson, of the brig Ports- 
mouthy and he will convey you for a few pistoles to 
England; there I will soon join you. Is it all ar- 
ranged?" 

Fontaine took his friend's hand, and would have 
pressed it to his lips, but Dupuy withdrew it, and 
embraced his companion. 

"To bed now," he said; "gain as much sleep as 
possible." 

Dupuy then saw that the outlets of the mansion 
were thoroughly secured, and soon silence reigned 
throughout the whole chateau. 

At nightfall on the following evening, Fontaine 
armed himself to the teeth, wrapped a cloak around 
his weapons, and silently grasping the hands of 
Dupuy and his wife, mounted liis Arabian. The 
three women traveled in a light carriage of Du- 
puy's ; and they thus set forward through the dark- 
ness. 



118 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I . Thirty minutes after their departure the sound 
^jjg of horses' hoofs was heard, and a company of dra- 
Wounded goons, headed by Jarnilloc, descended like a thun- 
Woif. der-bolt upon the chateau. 

"Where are the heretics?" cried the furious cap- 
tain of dragoons. "Burn the nest of traitors! 
Smoke out the enemies of his Majesty !" 

"Is it myself and my household to whom you al- 
lude, sire Captain?" said Dupuy, with his iron 
calmness. "If so, I beg you will proceed. Having 
lodged my safeguard, under his Majesty's hand, 
with the cure of the parish, I can afford to be killed, 
as you will be shot by command of his Majesty — if 
7 do not kill you." 

"Heretic!" cried the furious dragoon, "you har- 
bor traitors !" 

"Very well, come in and search, Messire Jarnilloc. 
I pray you not to break my furniture, however; it 
might displease his Majesty." 

"To the devil with your furniture!" cried the 
officer. "Corporal! take ten men and search the 
house !" 

The corporal obeyed, and we need not say failed 
to find Fontaine. 

"No one, Captain," reported the corporal, making 
the military salute. 

"And yet I had exact information that a traitor 
named Fontaine took refuge here, after murdering 
one of my soldiers last night." 

"Gone, Captain," said the corporal. 

"Ah, yes ! fled ! Scatter at once in pursuit !" 

With these words the officer put spur to his horse, 
and took to the road which Fontaine had followed, 
at full speed. The rest of the soldiers dispersed 
themselves over the surrounding country. 

"Oh, my God !" murmured Madame Dupuy, cling- 
ing to her husband, and turning as pale as death; 
"if they come up with them !" 

Dupuy's lips were firmly set together. 

"I ordered my horse," he said, "when I saw these 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 119 

men coming. There he comes! bar up securely, Chap. i. 
wife, and open to no one !" The 

With these words Dupuy seized his triangularWounded 
sword, and vaulting into the saddle, disappeared at ^°^^- 
full gallop upon Jarnilloc's track. In fifteen min- 
utes, such was the speed at which he advanced, the 
figure of his adversary came in sight. Five minutes 
more brought him abreast of the dragoon, beneath 
the drooping boughs. 

"Turn, wretch !" cried Dupuy, drawing his sword. 
"You dared to insult my wife, myself, my friends. 
You shall die! Defend yourself!" 

And he threw himself upon the captain of dra- 
goons, aiming a blow at his heart. 

Jarnilloc was brave, but the fury of Dupuy cowed 
him; he struck out almost at random, and the 
weapon of the soldier glided under his guard, and 
pierced his breast. The point of Jarnilloc's sword 
drew blood from Dupuy's arm, but the combat was 
over in a moment — though the dragoon's wound 
was not mortal. 

"In fair combat you will testify, Messire," said 
Dupuy, putting up his sword and saluting his ad- 
versary, who retained the saddle with difficulty. 
"I will not murder you, as you would me, under 
similar circumstances. If you annoy me further, 
however, Messire, I will kill you like a dog!" 

And the soldier turned his horse and rode back 
to his chatean. 

"That will break up the pursuit, I think," he mut- 
tered, "and I can not leave Susanne alone, with 
these fiends about. I must hasten mv arrange- 
ments, the country is getting too hot for me. Pray 
God that Jacques and his family may arrive safely 
at Tremblade !" 

An hour afterward Jarnilloc passed the gateway 
of the chateau, supported in the saddle by two 
troopers. As he continued his way, an expression 
of ferocious hatred, impossible to describe, distorted 
his pale features, and his red eyes glared. Dupuy 



tives. 



120 BAKTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. watched him until he disappeared, and then turning 
to his wife, said, 

"There is the wounded wolf! Take care, my 
lamb! He will tear you for this if he can. For 
myself I fear nothing. 

YIII. — The Fugitives. 

The Fontaine pushed his horse to full gallop, at the 
^"Si- side of the flving carriage: and the cortege traveled 
at this rapid rate throughout the night. 

At dawn, as Dupuy had predicted, they reached 
Tremblade; and were soon housed at Master Belton- 
net's. This man was to act as their pilot to the 
Portsmouth, which lay outside the harbor; he had 
been selected for this duty because he spoke 
English. 

The captain sent word that he would sail very 
early on the next day, and would pass between the 
isle of Oleron and the main land. If the fugitives 
awaited him on the sands near the forest of Arvert, 
he would send a boat ashore and take them oft. 

At the appointed time Fontaine loaded two 
horses with his few effects and repaired to the spot 
designated. But there was delay at the Custom- 
house, and the brig could not sail. Meanwhile the 
fugitives waited in a state of unspeakable suspense, 
and the entire day was thus passed. 

The Catholic priest of Tremblade heard that 
some Protestants were about to escape, and hurried 
to the spot. Two Huguenot fishermen, however, 
misled him; and he returned, thinking the report 
unfounded. 

At nightfall they were forced to return to Trem- 
blade, where they were harbored in the house of an 
abjurer. He entertained them for the whole of the 
next day, but, growing terribly frightened, at night- 
fall turned them all out, saying, "I have damned 
my own soul to save my property, and I am not go- 
ing to pay the 1000 crowns fine for harboring you. 
Take your chance elsewhere, or abjure like me." 



STORY OP A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 121 

Half an hour after they had left this man's house Chap, i. 
a troop of soldiers went to it and examined it ; they -phe 
had received information. Fugi- 

The captain of the Portsmouth sent word at this *'^^®^* 
crisis that he was watched, and could not assist 
them. Fontaine did not despair, however. On the 
same evening he hired a small shallop, embarked 
his party, and safely passed the pinnaces that 
guarded the port, and the fort of Oleron. 

At ten o'clock next morning they dropped anchor 
to wait for the Portsmouth, the boatman being in- 
structed, in case of pursuit, to run the boat ashore, 
when Sauve qui peut! was to be the course of pro- 
ceeding. 

The agreement with Captain Johnson had been 
that when they saw him, they were to make them- 
selves known by hoisting a sail, and letting it fall 
three times. About three o'clock in the afternoon 
the Portsmouth hove in sight, but the custom-house 
officers and pilot were still on board. Soon, how- 
ever, these officials left her in their boat, and the 
brig bore down straight toward them. 

Fontaine's heart bounded with joy and gratitude, 
but his pleasure was of short duration. A royal 
frigate of the French navy appeared, and with all 
sails set, came straight toward them. This was one 
of the vessels constantly kept on the coast to pre- 
vent the escape of Protestants; when such were 
taken, the women were sent to convents, and the 
men to work in the horrible galleys. 

The French frigate ordered the English ship to 
cast anchor, boarded her, and searched every nook 
and corner for fugitives. Not finding any, the 
French captain ordered the Englishman to sail in- 
stantly, which order was obeyed, leaving the de- 
spairing Huguenots behind. 

Fontaine almost yielded to despair, but he knelt 
and prayed, and was strengthened. Suddenly as 
the French frigate bore down upon them, a feint 
suggested itself. 



122 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I . "Cover us all up in the bottom of the boat with 

j'lie ^^ old sail," he said to the boatman. "Then hoist 

Fugi- your sail and go right toward the frigate, pretend- 

tives. jjjg ^Q endeavor to gain Tremblade. If they hail 

you, say you are from Rochelle. If they ask what 

you have on board, say nothing but ballast; and it 

would be well for you and your son to counterfeit 

drunkenness^ tumbling about in the boat, and then 

you can, as if by accident, let the sail fall three 

times, and so inform the English captain who 

we are." 

The order was instantly obeyed, the fugitives 
covered with an old sail, and the boat passed within 
pistol-shot of the frigate, which hailed her. The 
reply was as Fontaine had directed. 

"But what made you cast anchor?" 

"I hoped the wind would change, and we could 
make Tremblade, but it's still too strong for us." 

As he spoke the boatman cursed his son, who 
had dropped the sail, as had been agreed. The 
father left the helm and pretended to strike him 
with a rope-end. The son cried out lustily, and the 
people in the frigate ordered the elder to desist, or 
they would come and treat him likewise. 

"The rascal's as drunk as a hog," said the boat- 
man, returning to the helm. "Hoist the sail there !" 

The son let it fall twice in succession, as he pre- 
tended to obey. 

"Return to Rochelle — the wind is too rough!" 
came from the frigate. 

"Yes, Captain," said the boatman, joyfully, for 
that was exactly the direction of the English ship, 
and the boat fled before the wind toward the Eng- 
lishman, through the yawning waves of the rising 
storm. They got safe on board while the frigate 
was still in sight, and the brig instantly put to sea. 

Kneeling upon the spray-covered deck, with his 
arms around his niece and his betrothed, Fontaine 
returned devout thanks to God. As he rose from 
his knees, the coast of France was disappearing in 
the darkness. 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 123 

"Adieu!" he said, sadly, extending his hands Chap. i. 
toward his native soil. "Adieu, forever!"* 

IX.— The Priest. 

On the morning of the 30th November, Messire The 
Barthelemi Dupuy was informed that the cure of Priest, 
the neighboring village wished to see him. This 
worthy man was sincerely attached to Dupuy, who 
had befriended him in former times, and he now 
came to endeavor to make his friend abjure and 
become a Catholic. 

For two hours the worthy man continued his as- 
saults on the Protestant convictions of Dupuj, 
with no opposition from that gentleman worthy of 
attention. At last he ceased, and asked if he could 
still remain a schismatic, and undergo the terrible 
punishment of such in the world to come, and even 
in the present world. 

"My good cure," said Dupuy, coolly, "I have 
listened to you with great attention, and have duly 
appreciated your arguments. I have been much 
struck with their force, especially this one in the 
last clause of vour discourse." 

"The future punishment, eh?" sighed the worthy 
cure. 

"No, excuse me, the punishment my heresy will 
entail upon me, 'even in the present world,' as you 
say. Now that is talking to the point! In other 
words, if I do not abjure, I shall be tortured, shot, 
or burnt — is it not so?" 

The cure shook his head, sadly. 

"I very much fear that it will so result !" 

"And you think I should abjure?" 

"I pray you to." 

"Why, good cure?" said Dupuy. "I am unfortu- 
nately a soldier; I have a ridiculous, absurd, foolish 
partiality for not deserting my colors. You see I 
have fought under the Lutheran flag, and I must 
have some reason to change my party and embrace 

*A11 here related is literally true. 



124 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. the cause of his Excellency the Pope of Rome- 



^jjg the opposing banner. You will excuse me, but this 
Priest, seems to me reasonable." 

"Have I not given you good reasons, my son? 
Have I not — ^" 

"Talked about the Saints? Yes, a good deal, my 
worthy cure. But I have not yet made up my mind 
to believe in them. I even doubt the doctrines of 
Purgatory, Indulgences, Absolution, and the Im- 
maculate Conception." 

The cure shook his head as if these words both 
pained and shocked him. 

"But how is it possible for you to doubt these 
tenets of the Holy Church, my son?" he said. "You 
cause me very great suffering." 

"I am truly sorry; but I can not say otherwise, 
though I fully appreciate the kindness of your 
visit." 

" 'Twas duty !" 

"Well, others would have considered it differ- 
ently. They would have endeavored to convert me 
by holding up a picture of the fagot or the halter. 
Now 'tis probable that it will come to that, is it 
not?" 

The cure heaved a deep sigh. 

"I fear it is," he said. 

"And you would be compelled to inform upon 
me?" 

"A terrible duty again," sighed the poor cure. 
"Yet the Holy Father inculcates the necessity." 

"So that you, who have eaten at my table, taken 
my arm, talked familiarly with my wife, and slept 
in security beneath my roof — you would be com- 
pelled to point me out as a heretic, to bring the 
dragoons to my door — to fit the halter round my 
neck, or the fagots around my limbs! This would 
be your bounden duty, would it not, Aymer?" 

The old familiar name put the finishing stroke 
to the terrific appeal. With bloodless cheeks, brows 
bathed in perspiration, and trembling lips, the un- 
happy cure murmured, 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 125 

"It would be my duty !" Chap, i . 

"Well, my friend," said Dupuy, coolly, "you can ^he 
scarcely feel surprise when I hesitate to embrace a Priest, 
religion which makes such action on your part 
necessary. Now I am only a poor devil of a Hugue- 
not, you see ; but before I would betray you, Aymer, 
I would cut off my right hand and throw it in the 
face of the barbarous monster, whether he were 
Emperor, Pope, or King, who dared to tempt me !" 

"Oh my son ! my son ! think what you say ! The 
Holy Father — the Vicegerent of God — a barbarous 
monster !" 

"True, I was wrong," said Dupuy, coldly. "That 
is dangerous, and 'tis your duty to inform on me." 

"I must — I should — I will try not to!" stam- 
mered the poor cure. "Oh ! Avhy am I tried thus — 
with such cruelty? Yes, Barthelemi, 'tis my duty, 
and were you my own mother's son I must perform 
my duty!" 

Dupuy rose calmly, and, with a side-look at the 
cure, said: 

"Perhaps I might change my views, good father. 
Who knows? Stranger things have happened. His 
Majesty's safeguard, which you have returned to 
me, expires to-morrow, and the question seriously 
occurs — torture and death, or the sacrament?" 

"Oh, abjure, my son ! my dear Barthelemi, abjure, 
and save 3"<^urself and me from agony !" 

"W^ell, who knows what I may do, my good 
Aymer? Don't inform on me until the day after 
to-morrow; then you will know my decision." 

"I will not," said the poor cure; "and now fare- 
well. Consider the life of your immortal soul, my 
son. I will fast and pray for you." 

With these words the cure went sadly out, and 
returned to the village. 

X. — The Advocate and the Tailor. 



Half an hour after the departure of the priest, The 
Dupuy sent a servant to the village to request the^'^^^'^J* 
presence of Messire Agoust, advocate. Tailor. 



126 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I . Agoust hastened to obey, and was closeted with 

The the master of the chateau for an hour. 
Advocate At the end of that time he came out, bowing, and 
TaUor^ Scraping, and went away. 

"Aha !" he muttered ; "so we get rid of you at last, 
do we, Messire Barthelemi Dupuy? I am glad of 
it, and I have not the least intention of informing 
on you. I buy your estate at one-third of its value, 
and shall be the Seigneur Agoust hereafter, while, 
if I informed upon you, the fine old chateau would 
be escheated to the crown and lost to me. I am 
very well content with my bargain, Messire, and 
will disprove the proverb, which declares that law- 
yers never are honest, at least until I get my title- 
deeds. I beat you down four thousand crowns, and 
am well content, my good Messire Dupuy." 

An hour afterward Agoust returned with a heavy 
bag of gold at his girdle, which he counted out be- 
fore Dupuy. He then received the title-deeds of the 
estate. 

"A pleasant journey, Messire," he said, "to you 
and madame." 

"Thank you," said Dupuy, coolly, "for your good 
wishes." 

"Ah! you are not alarmed, then, at my knowl- 
edge of your intended flight?" 

"Why should I be, my good Messire Agoust? You 
are a sensible man ; you have abjured to retain your 
life and property; you would prefer buying my 
chateau at Velours at one-fourth of its value rather 
than compromise upon seeing me roasted, eh?" 

"Your lordship is very profound in human 
motives," said the attorney, smirking, "and I swear 
you are correct. You may go in safety as far as 
I am concerned." 

And, bowing, he departed. 

"Nevertheless, I'll not trust you, rascal," said 
Dupuy, looking after him. "To-morrow your in- 
formation comes too late. 'Tis almost dark — time 
for Pourtigot to arrive. Ah ! there he is." 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 127 

Pourtigot was the tailor of the village^ and Dii- Chap, i . 
puy had ordered him to have ready in six hours the j^-^^ 
complete costume of a gentleman's page. Advocate 

The tailor now entered, bowing and smiling more ^^,*^® 
impressively even than Agoust Had done. 

" 'Tis all prepared, my lord," he said, unrolling 
the costume; "a beautiful piece of Flander's cloth — 
most exquisite. And see this velvet." 

"It really is very handsome," said Dupuy, negli- 
gently, "and my new page will win the heart of 
every girl upon the village green ; eh, Messire 
Pourtigot?" 

"At the very least, I should say, my lord," re- 
plied the tailor, bowing. 

"Well, my friend," said Dupuy, counting out a 
handful of crowns, "there is your money, and some- 
thing more. If you should chance to be passing in 
a week or so, call here at mv chateau, and vou will 
probably receive an order for the full costume of 
a gentleman. It will be needed. Good-day, Messire 
Pourtigot." 

And Dupuy bowed his head in token of dismissal. 
Messire Pourtigot went away overjoyed. He had 
received thrice the value of his work, and the 
promise of a new order. "The full costume of a 
gentleman would be needed." It is rather in the 
nature of a digression to say that Messire Agoust 
did not indorse the order — only insulted the honest 
tailor — the week after. 

No sooner had the man disappeared than Du- 
puy's manner lost all its negligence. He rose 
rapidly to his feet, and called "Susanne! Susanne!" 

The lovely woman appeared so suddenly, that it 
was plain she had been listening and watching, 

"There is no time to be lost," said Dupuy, hur- 
riedly; "put on this page's costume; take all your 
jewels, your Bible, and psalm-book, and bring 
hither some bread and wine, while I put on my 
uniform and arm myself. Quick! There is not a 
moment to lose! It is growing dark, and before 



128 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chapel, morning we must be far away, if we would escape 
the fagot or the gallows. Lose no time !" 

XI.— The Flight to the Frontier. 
The In twenty minutes the beautiful woman re-ap- 
to?he Peared, clad in the rich page's costume of brown 
Frontier, cloth and velvet. It consisted of a coat, slashed 
and decorated with embroidery, a long waistcoat, 
buttoning nearly up to the chin, beneath which a 
snowy ruffle just revealed itself, loosely-fitting knee- 
breeches, and Spanish shoes reaching midway to 
the knee. The flexible tops of chamois leather could 
easily be pulled up, so as to protect the delicate 
limbs in riding. The beautiful hair of the young 
lady had been quickly gathered up, and secured be- 
neath the dark cap, with its floating feather. This, 
and a handsome cloth cloak depending from one 
shoulder, completed the costume. 

The Countess, thus accoutred, resembled a small 
and delicate youth of exquisitely proportioned fig- 
ure, except that no boy, however bashful, ever 
blushed half so deeply as she did when her husband 
reappeared. 

"There ! there ! sweet !" said Dupuy, hastily ; "let 
us lose no time in comments. Your costume is un- 
pleasant, that is easy to understand ; but if it takes 
you safely over the frontier, and gives you to my 
arms, 'twill answer every purpose. Let us now 
hasten to swallow some bread and wine. We shall 
need it." 

Dupuy, ordinarily so calm and resolute, seemed 
at this decisive moment to be possessed by a demon 
of haste, almost of trepidation. It was because all 
that he held dearest in the world was staked upon 
the cast of a die : the events of the next few hours 
would determine the complexion of his whole future 
life. 

He devoured the dry bread with ravenous haste, 
washed it down with huge gulps of wine, and forced 
the Countess to do likewise. 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 129 

A careless observer would have said that a soldier Chap. i. 
armed to the teeth, and a handsome lady's page in "^^ 
gala costume, had laid a wager who could eat and Flight 
drink the most in a given time. * ° *^? 

Dupuy from moment to moment raised his head, 
paused in his devouring attack upon the viands, 
and listened. Nothing was heard but the sobbing 
of the wintry wind through the evergreens and 
oaks ; darkness and desolation seemed to reign over 
the wide land and in the chateau. 

At last Dupuy rose. Standing thus in the rays 
of the single lamp he presented a striking spectacle. 
He was clad in his uniform as king's guardsman, 
and in his belt was thrust the short triangular 
sword which we have so frequently referred to ; be- 
side it were secured in the same manner three or 
four heavy pistols. Slung behind, beneath his 
cloak, was the bag of gold paid to him by Agoust. 

As he thus rose to his feet the sound of hoofs was 
heard at the back window. 

Dupuy looked cautiously out, and made a sign 
of satisfaction. 

"It is Rayonnet," he said, in a low tone; "all is 
ready." 

And drawing the Countess with his arm, he took 
a last look at the portraits of his ancestors, and 
hastily descended to the court-yard. 

"Make haste. Seigneur," whispered the old gray- 
headed groom. "I thought I heard horses' hoofs in 
the direction of the village." 

"Ah! the dragoons? Was there a clatter?" 

"Yes, yes. Seigneur! Make haste! I hear them 
coming plainly!" 

Dupuy raised the Countess into the saddle with 
a single movement, and vaulted on his own animal, 
which was a black of great size and strength. 

"Yes," said Dupuy, "now I hear them too. I hear 
Agoust's voice, the hound ! He has betrayed me ! 
But we have the start! Rayonnet, if you would 
follow me, come to Amsterdam; you know the 
way — we were there together ! There's gold ! Come !'* 



130 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. "For God's sake, Seigneur!" cried the faithful 
rphe servant, "don't think of me. There they are ! They 
Flight are coming on like a wliirlwind, shouting fit to 
to the burst them! In another moment you are lost!" 

Dupuy replied by shaking his clenched hand 
toward the dragoons, muttering an exclamation of 
hatred, and seizing the bridle of the Countess's 
horse. 

In another instant they were out of the little 
grassy court-yard, and had disappeared like shad- 
owy phantoms beneath the drooping boughs of the 
forest. 

As they did so, Jarnilloc, at the head of his 
troopers, and accompanied by the traitor Agoust, 
burst into the chateau uttering howls of rage and 
blood-thirsty triumph at his anticipated vengeance. 

With a yell of furious joy he broke down the 
door, and at the head of his dragoons, rushed with 
curses and cries into the great dining-room, whose 
walls seemed to shudder at the terrific shouts. 
Above, the calm, serene, old nobleman on canvas 
looked down with a tranquil gaze upon the scene. 

"Gone!" cried Agoust. "He has fled, and you 
are too late, Captain !" 

"Rascal !" cried Jarnilloc, seizing the advocate 
by the throat, "this is thy fault ! I will squeeze thy 
cursed eyeballs out !" 

And he grasped the advocate's throat until he 
was black in the face. Agoust fell upon his knees 
and begged for mercy. He could tell by what road 
they fled, he pleaded, and they might be overtaken ; 
they were only a man and woman. 

"Good!' cried the furious dragoon, whose rage 
and hatred gave him supernatural strength despite 
his wound. "Six men in the saddle, and you, too, 
rascally advocate ! The rest stay and cut to pieces 
everything in this cursed house!" 

In another moment Jarnilloc was dashing at full 
speed on the road indicated by the despairing ad- 
vocate, who thus saw his property ruined, but dared 
say nothing. 



STORY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 131 

The road was a cross-cut, debouching upon the Chap.i. 
main highway, which Dupuy must take to reach -jjjg 
the frontier; and such was the furious speed of the Flight 
troop that ere long they saw the moonlight glim- *° ^^? 
mering in the opening forest above the high road. 

Jarnilloc uttered a howl of triumph as he caught 
the sound of horses at a rapid gallop. Dupuy and 
the Countess came on at full speed, and Jarnilloc 
rushed to meet them, discharging his pistol at his 
enemy. 

The ball missed Dupuy, but struck the Countess 
full in the breast. The delicate form reeled in the 
saddle, and fell forward on the horse's mane. 

Dupuy uttered a hoarse roar, and leveled his 
pistol at Jarnilloc. The ball pierced his heart, and 
letting the bridle fall, the captain of dragoons 
rolled beneath his horse's feet — dead. 

Dupuy's sword leaped from its scabbard, and 
seizing with his left hand the Countess's bridle, he 
passed like a thunder-bolt through his enemies, 
dealing mortal blows as he passed — and in a mo- 
ment his splendid animal had borne him beyond 
danger. 

"Oh, my God!" he cried, as he saw the form of 
the Countess rise erect, "you are not wounded, 
wife?" 

"God spared me!" said the lady, taking from her 
bosom her book of Psalms. "See, the ball struck 
this, and I am unhurt !" 

"Praise the Lord, O my soul !" cried the Hugue- 
not, "Blessed be His holy name! Now let us ride!" 

And, followed by the dragoons uttering yells of 
rage, Dupuy and the Countess drove their fine ani- 
mals to furious speed ; and at every bound increased 
the distance between themselves and their pursuers. 

"I would have turned and died yonder, in the 
midst of my enemies," said Dupuy. "I should never 
have survived vou. But we are saved !" 

And they continued their flight — the cries of 
their pursuers becoming fainter and fainter as they 
dashed on. 



132 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. Almost without stopping to procure food — look- 

;j>jjg ing upon every side for enemies — trembling at the 

Flight very sound of their horses' hoofs — and praying, 

to the even during their headlong career, to the God of 

'their faith to preserve them, and conduct them 

safely to the land of promise which they fled to, 

rather than abjure their religion — thus, weary and 

faint, but with no thought of yielding, with forms 

drooping in the saddle but still bent to the task — 

in this manner did the fugitives pass over league 

after league, and through province after province, 

and finally neared the frontier. 

They were about to pass the station where the 
Custom-house ofl&cers and a body of troops were 
posted to guard the entrance into the kingdom, 
when suddenly a dragoon, mounted upon a power- 
ful horse, placed himself in the way. 

Dupuy collected all his resolution to meet this 
conclusive trial. 

"Stop, Messire!" said the dragoon; "be pleased 
to check your horse. No one passes here without 
giving an account of himself. Come with me." 

"I will do nothing of the sort!" said Dupuy. 

"Ah, my good gentleman ; then I will arrest you !" 

"You will not presume to," returned Dupuy, 
drawing his triangular sword with his right hand 
and presenting the letter of Louis XIV. with the 
other. "Now, Messire dragoon, I am one of the 
King's guardsmen, as you see by my uniform, and 
I am on the King's business. You stop me at your 
peril !" 

The soldier drew back with a low bow. He could 
not read, but he recognized the royal seal, and the 
name of the great divinity "Louis." He would as 
soon have endeavored to dispute the will of a god. 

"Pass, Messire," he said, "and pardon my chal- 
lenge. We are good soldiers of his Majesty, and 
would be sorry to cause you any inconvenience in 
dispatching the King's business. If your lordship 
would like to stop and empty a cup, we shall be 



STOKY OF A HUGUENOT'S SWORD. 133 

delighted to entertain you. Your guardsman's uni- chap. i. 
form is quite sufficient introduction !" ^^^ 

"Thanks," said Dupuy, "but I must hasten on." Flight 

"So quick? Your page looks weary — a very to the 
handsome boy! Come, Messire page! induce the '^*'°*'"- 
Seigneur to draw rein for a moment." 

"I can not, Sieur." 

"Ah! he is a determined master, is he?" said the 
dragoon, smiling. 

"A very good master, Messire." 

"Perhaps something more," laughed the soldier, 
keenly scrutinizing the feminine figure of the 
Countess. "Seigneur guardsman, you have really 
a beautiful companion there.'" 

"Companion?" 

"Yes ! Why 'tis plain your page is nothing less 
than a girl." 

"Pshaw, Messire! what are you dreaming of? 
But I have no time to talk! Give you good-day, 
Messire — I have the honor to salute you !" 

And making a sign to his pretended page, Dupuy 
put spurs to his horse, and passed on at full speed, 
accompanied by the Countess. In half an hour 
they passed beneath the dense foliage of a wood 
of Germany, checked their foaming horses in a 
secluded glade, and looking around saw that no 
signs of man were visible. 

They were saved ! 

Dupuy tied the panting animals to a tree, lifted 
his wife from the saddle, and in an instant she was 
weeping in his arms, pressed to his beating heart. 

" 'I waited patiently for the Lord, and he inclined 
unto me, and heard my cry,' " said the soldier. 
" 'He brought me up also out of an horrible pit, 
out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock. 
He called me — then said I, Lo, I come.' " 

" 'Withhold not thou thy tender mercies from 
me, O Lord,'" murmured the weeping Countess; 
" 'let thy loving-kindness and thy truth continually 
preserve me.' " 



134 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I . And the true wife clung closer to her true hus- 
The band. 

Flight And there in the silent wood, the brave soldier 
Frontier, ^iid devoted woman knelt, and offered up a prayer 
of gratitude for their deliverance. In those days 
strong men prayed, and died or left lands and coun- 
try for their faith, and God gave them duly the 
fruition of the promise of the "life that now is" 
even. 

Heart pressed to heart, the good Seigneur Dupuy 
and his brave wife prayed long and fervently, and 
then rose and went upon their way. 

XII. — In Virginia. 

In Our true chronicle is told ; and we need not pause 
Virginia. ^Q comment on it here, or point the spirit and the 
moral. 

Long years afterward in Monican-town. on the 
banks of the noble James River, in Virginia, an 
aged soldier lay upon his death-bed, with a kneeling 
woman weeping at his side, and children watching 
the pale face through tears. 

"Don't cry, Susanne," said Messire Dupuy. "I 
am only going home, whither you, true wife, will 
follow me. Do you know what we said in the wpodg 
of Germany? 'I waited patiently for the Lord, and 
he inclined unto me, and heard my cry.' Blessed 
be his name! In him and the blessed Jesus is my 
trust — I who have lived and now die a true Hugue- 
not!" 

The faint voice faltered, and a ray of sunlight 
falling on the snowy hair, lit it up gloriously. 

"And to you, my children," continued the dying 
gentleman, "I bequeath an untainted name, which 
you in turn should bear worthily. Jacques," he 
continued, addressing the eldest, "take my old 
sword there, and make use of it in a good cause 
only ; it has never been drawn in a bad one. Fight 
for your country and your faith, so God shall bless 
you. Imitate your godfather, Jacques de la Fon- 



STORY OF SWORD CONFIRMED. 135 

taine, of noble memory. And now, my children, chap. i. 
take my blessing," "^ 

They knelt with sobs, and the hand of the dying Virginia, 
soldier rested in turn upon every forehead. 

As the last wofds were uttered he fell faintly 
back, and a sigh only marked the passage of the 
true gentleman from earth to heaven — from time 
to eternity. 

It was the bright sunshine of Virginia, the new 
land, w hich rested last upon his forehead ; but this 
was his home now, loved and cherished like the old, 
old home in France. 

He died as he had lived, a true Huguenot. No 
better epitaph is needed. 



In addition to statements made in ''The 
Story of a Huguenot's Sword," there are 1685. 
records preserved, by the older descendants of 
Bartholomew Dupuy which throw light on his story of 
escape. The flight of himself and wife ^^°^^ 
through the country, from the western to the firmed, 
eastern frontier, occupied some eighteen days. 
He was frequently interrogated as to his busi- 
ness and speed, but replied that he was the 
King's officer and was on business which de- 
manded haste; and when more particularly 
pressed would add that he had the King's 
orders in his pocket. As he neared the 
eastern frontier, which was more securely and 
strictly guarded to apprehend refugees, he 
was more frequently and pressingly inter- 
rupted, but with the polite brevity of one clad 
in a courtier's uniform, his word was a suffi- 
cient passport. It was on his last day's ride, 
and to the last stationed guard, that he had to 
expose the King's signature, attached no 
doubt to his certificate of amnesty, before he 
was allowed to pass. The book of Psalms 
which stopped the bullet and saved his wife's 



136 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

c^^PiJ- life, I have been frequently told, is still pre- 
served by one of the descendants through his 
son John James, and his granddaughter 
Olympia Trabue. On reaching German soil 
and dismounting, it was the 40th Psalm which 
he and his wife chanted. It seems to have been 
his original intention to go at once to England, 
but for some reason he and his wife remained 
in Germany, or elsewhere, fourteen years, of 
which time we have no account of them at all. 
1699. In 1699, they went, (we think from Geneva, 

England. Switzerland), to England upon the public 
invitation of King William, promising to 
refugee emigrants to the colonies, in a free 
passage, and to give them freedom of religion. 
Beginning in the spring of the year 1700, 
Four seven hundred French Protestant refugees, in 

^/joa' four separate fleets, at intervals of some 
months, embarked from England to America^ 
with Marquis de la Muce at their head, and 
were finally landed in Virginia. There were 
three ministers of the Gospel and two physi- 
cians who accompanied the expedition. The 
ministers were Claude Philippe de Richeburg, 
Benjamin de Joux, and Louis Latane. The 
physicians were Castaing (Chastain?), and 
La Sosee. Of some two hundred of those 
Huguenot refugees, a settlement was formed 
at Manakintown in King William Parish, 
about eighteen miles above Richmond, on the 
south side of James River, in that part of 
Henrico which is now Powhatan County, Va. 
King The King William Parish was a body of land, 

Parish? ^^ ^6^ thousand acres, which was granted by 
act of the General Assembly, December 5, 
1700, to Huguenot refugees. It had been occu- 
pied by the Monacan Indians, a warlike tribe, 
which had withstood the power of Powhatan, 



BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN AMERICA. 137 

but had disappeared before the whites. From chap. i. 
one of those fleets, (we think the 4th), Bar- 
tholomew Dupuy, his wife, and their children 
> landed on American soil at Jamestown, Va., Arrival 
and finally made their permanent residence in 
in the Parish. All of their children had been ^^"'^ 
born in Germany, or elsewhere, prior to their 
immigration. The settlers of the Parish were 
exempted from the payment of all taxes for 
seven years, and were allowed to support 
their minister in their own way. The land 
was to be divided among the families in 
tracts of 133 acres, and a portion of the most 
valuable was to be set apart for the support 
of their minister, and the supply of their 
church pulpit during its vacancy. In the 
original settlement they built a church, where 
one still stands, and worshipped twice per 
Sabbath, and also maintained worship in their 
families thrice per day. In the same settle- 
ment they also built a schoolhouse and 
educated their children. 

That these immigrants endured many hard- 
ships for a number of years before they pat- 
ented their tracts of land may be gathered 
from the following extract : 

"The State of the French Refugees." 

10 and 11th May, 1701. The 10th of May, last, state of 
I with Coll. Randolph, Capt. Epes, Capt. Webb, &c., French 
went up to the new settlements of ve ffrench ^^^"^ees. 
Refugees at ye Manakin Town. Wee visited about 
seventy of their hutts, being, most of them, very 
mean ; there being upwards of fourty of y'm betwixt 
ye two Creeks, w'eh is about four miles along on 
ye River, and have cleared all ye old Manacan 
ffields for near three miles together, as also some 
others (who came thither last ffeb'ry, as Blackman 



138 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chapj. ^qi^ yg^ have cleared new grounds toward the Lower 
1701. Creeke, and done more worke than they y't went 
thither first. They have, all of y'm, some Garden 
trade and have planted corne, but few of y'm had 
broke up their ground or wed the same, whereupon 
I went for most/ of y'm and told y'm they must not 
expect to enjoy ye land unless they would endeavor 
to improve it, and if they make no corne for their 
subsistance next yeare they could not expect any 
further releif from the County. Mon'r de Joux 
promised at their next meeting to acquaint them 
all w'th w*t I said, and to endeavor to stirr y'm up 
to be diligent in weeding and securing their corne 
and wheat, of w'ch latter there are many small 
patches, but some is overrun w'th woods, and the 
horses (of w'ch they have severall, w'th some Cows) 
have spoiled more; most of y'm promise faire. 
Indeed, they are very poor, and I am not able to 
supply y'm w'th Corne (they being about 250 last 
month), having bought up all in these two counties, 
and not haveing recieved one month's provision 
from all ye other Countyes, there being some in the 
Isle of Wight, but cannot hire any to fetch it. 
There are about 20 families seated for 4 or 5 miles 
below the Lower Creeke and have cleared small 
plantations, but few of y'm had broke up their 
grounds. . . . Tho' these people are very poor, 
yet they seem very cheerful and are (as farr as wee 
could learne) very healthy, all they seem to desire 
is y't they might have Bread enough. Wee lodged 
there that night and returned the new Road I 
caused to be marked, which is extraordinary Level! 
and dry way and leads either to the ffalls or the 
mill, a very good well beaten path for carts. 
W. Byrd." (Virginia Historical Collections.) 

Entry of In the Virginia Land Registry Office of 

^^°^- Richmond, Book No. 10, page 364, is found this 

record: ^'Bartholomew Dupee (Dupuy), 

March 11, 1717, 133 acres, on the south side of 



BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN AMERICA. 139 

James River, Begg. &c standing on the south Chap. i . 
side of lower Monakin Creek — part of the 
Land surveyed for the French refugees. ' ' Lq 
about 1722, the Vestry Book assigns him 208 1722-31. 
acres. In their new home the progenitor and 
his family lived for many years, enjoying at 
least the free exercise of their religion, if not 
much of the comforts of life; and the family 
took an active part in church work and its 
services. This we learn from two reliable 
documents — The Original "Vestry Book of 
the Parish,'^ which has recently been trans- 
lated from the French, and published in the 
Virginia Magazine, and the "Baptismal Reg- 
ister" of the church at Manakintown, pub- 
lished years ago by the Virginia Historical 
Society; from the latter we record quotations 
further on. From the first document we 
learn that Bartholomew Dupuy was elected a 
vestryman of the church at Manakintown, 
August 25, 1718, but for some reason did not 
take the oath of office till January 29, 1723/24. 
As such he served until March 30, 1725, when 
he was elected a church warden. On July 23, 
1726 he is again recorded as a vestryman and 
so on until April 23, 1731, when he offered his 
resignation, being about 79 years of age and it 
was accepted. He was an officer of the church 
and appears to have been for years very punc- 
tual to the meetings of the vestry. The 
Vestry Book contains also the following 
records: "February 2, 1725-8, Monsieur Bar- 
tehlemis Dupu}^ rented the glebe for a year for 
a barrel and one-half of wheat, pavable at the 
next harvest.'' "July 24, 1729, I, Jacob 
Capon, acknowledge receipt from Mons. 
Barthelemy Dupuy of 8 bushels for the levy 
of the parish; further, I acknowledge receipt 



140 BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN HISTORY. 

Chap. I. from Mons. Dupuy of 7 bushels and one-half 
for rent of the glebe." His name appears in 
the tax list from 1710 to 1738. In the Bap- 
tismal Register, the children of Bartholomew 
Dupuy are recorded many times as sponsors 
in the ordinance of Baptism, and of his 27 
grandchildren, no less than 21 are recorded as 
having been baptized in infancy and no doubt 
they were all baptized, but they were not 
recorded. This indicates the activity of them 
all in religious life. The last time the name 
of his wife appears in any document, known to 
the writer, is as a sponsor in the baptism, 
associated with her husband, of her grand- 
daughter, Marye Levilain, October 27, 1731. 
In the transfer of real estate of the old pro- 
genitor to his son Peter, in 1737, her name is 
not signed to the deed, and it may be safely 
concluded that she had passed away, and that 
after her death the father spent the remnant 
of his days, having disposed of his real estate, 
with his children, or some one of them. Hence 

Death, her presence at the death scene, portrayed in 
the ''Story of a Huguenot's Sword," cannot 
be true, and no doubt Mr. Cooke confused it 
with what occurred later. The old progeni- 
tor died about April, 1743, as his will was pro- 

sword. bated on May 17 of that year. His sword 
was long treasured as an heir-loom by his 
descendants from his grandson John Bar- 
tholomew. It was worn in the Revolution by 
Capt. James Dupuy, a great-grandson, of 
Nottoway County, Va., who replaced the old 
worn out scabbard, by one which he picked 
up on the battle field of Guilford, N. C. The 
Sword was apparently of the French rapier 
pattern, which began to be manufactured 
about 1650, and was used chiefly for thrust- 



BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY IN AMEHICA. 141 

ing. The blade was straight, about three feet c hap. i. 
in length, and triangular in shape throughout, 
somewhat like the modern bayonet; at the 
hilt it was very strong, but rapidly di- 
minished in thickness for about eight inches, 
when it became comparatively slender. This 
construction combined perfect poise with 
lightness, and great strength, and made the 
weapon very effective in the hands of a 
skilled swordsman. When Captain James 
Bupuy was on his death bed, relates Dr. 
Foote, he said to his grandson, Dr. John 
James Dupuy, son of Dr. William Jones 
Dupuy: "Take my old sword there, make use 
of it in a good cause only; it has never been 
drawn in a bad one. Fight for your country 
and your faith; so God shall bless you." In 
the civil war, during a raid of Federal troops 
near Petersburg, Va., the sword was lost at Loss of 
the burning of the residence of Mrs. Julian ^word. 
Ruffin, in whose charge it had been left by its 
last owner. Dr. J. J. Dupuy (her son-in-law), 
of Prince George County, who served in the 
C. S. A., and was obliged to wear a sword of 
modern pattern. Whether the sword was 
burned in the house, or carried off b}^ the 
Federal troops, is still questioned by descend- 
ants of that branch. Some hold strongly to 
the latter view, and believe it might yet be 
recovered, if advertised extensively through- 
out the North. 



CHAPTER 11. 

QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

Quotations from "The General List of Frencli Prot- 
estants. 

C hap. I I. The quotations which follow are taken 
from ''Collections of the Virginia Historical 
Society, New Series, Vol. V.,^' and are im- 
portant in establishing the number and names 
of the children of original settlers in King 
William Parish, and the dates of births of 
many of their grandchildren, as well as indi- 
cating the interest and activity they exhibited 
in the church at Manakintown, Va. The 
quotations are from publications of original 
documents, and we use those only, which are 
important to establish facts of interest rela- 
tive to Bartholomew Dupuy, and his descend- 
ants, and some families connected with them. 
The first is from the ' ' General List of French 
Protestants" of King William Parish, ar- 
ranged in families. It was first published 
from Original M. S. in Perry's "Papers 
Relating to the History of the Church in Vir- 
ginia, A. D. 1650-1776," and is not dated. It 
comprises "Noms Des Hommes" (names of 
men); "Femmes" (wives); "Enfans'' (off- 
spring), including "Garcons" (sons), and 
"Filles" (daughters): 

Enfans. 
NOMS DES HOnnES. Femmes. Osrcons. Fllles. Total. 

List of Pierre Cliastain 1 2 4 8 

pJoTest- ^I'^'^^^oi"^ Dupuy 1 .. 1 3 

ants. Daniel Guerrand (Guerrant) 12 2 6 

Barthelemy Dupuy 1 3 2 7- 

Jacques Sobler (Sublett)... 1114 

Jean Chastain 1 . . . . 2 



(( 



BAPTISMAL REGISTER. 143 

Louis Sobler (Sublett) 1 1 .. 3 Chap. ii. 

Estienne Chastain 1 , . . . 2 

Abra. Sobler, lesiie (Sublett) 1 

Abra Sobler, lejeune (Sublett) 1 .. ,. 2 

Jean Levillain 1 2 2 6 

Antlioine Trabue 1 3 .. 5 

The next set of quotations is taken from the 
Register containing the Baptisms made in 
the church of the French Refugees at Mana- 
kintown in Virginia, in the Parish of King 
William." These entries are numbered for 
the sake of reference. 

Baptismal Register. 

1. "Jean Chastain, son of Jean Cbiastain and of John 
Marianne Chastain, his father and mother, born ^^*^*^°' 
the 26 of September, 1721, was baptized the 5 Oe- ^^^^' 
tober by Mr. Fontainne, he had for godfather and 
godmother, Pierre David and Anne David, his wife, 

who have declared that this child was born the day 
and year above." 

2. "The 18th August, 1721, was born Daniel, the Daniel 
son of Daniel Guerrant and of Francoise Guerrant,^"®"*°*- 

I 721 

his father and mother; he was baptized the — of 
October, by Mr. Fontaine; he was presented for 
baptism by Daniel Guerrant, his grand (father?) 
and Madame Lorange, his grand mother." 

3. "The Januarv, 1723, was born Jean JohnB. 

(Dupuy?)* Pierre Dupuy, and of J. was ^"P^^' 

baptized." 

4. "The 3d June, 1727, was born Jean, son of Joan 1727. 
Dykar and of Elizabeth Dykar; was baptized the Dupuys. 
4th September by Mr. Neirn, minister of Vairren 
(Varina). He was presented to Baptism by Jean 
Jaque dupuy at 10 by (Stephen) Etiene Monford, 
godmother philip dupuy." 



♦The bracketted name should be Barthelemy, as John Barthol- 
omew was the son of Peter Dupuy, and his wife, Judith. 



144 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

C hap. I I. 5. "The 23 day of August, 1727, was born Marie 

Mary Magdelaine, a girl, to Mr. Estieue Chastain and 

Magda- Marthe Chastain, her father and mother; was pre- 

Ciiagj-ain^eented for baptism by Mr. Barthelmie dupuy and 

Mar(thet) dupuy, his wife." 

J. Sublet, Clerk of the foregoing. 
Louf ^' ""^^^ ^^^ April, 1728, was born Louis Soblet, 
Sobiet. ^^^ ^^ Pierre Louis Soblet and of Marte, his wife; 

was baptized by Mr. Na(irn?)." 

1728 7. "The 12th February, 1728 (1729), was born 

Peter Pierre Dupui, son of Pierre Dupui and Judith 

Dupuy. Dupuy; was baptized the 20th of said month by 

Mr. Swift; had for godfather, Etienne Chastain, 

and for godmother, Philipe Dupui." 

1728 8. "The 24th February, 1728 (1729), was born 

Peter Pierre Chastain, son of Jean Chastain and of Char- 

Chastain.lote Chastain; was baptized by Mr. Swift the 24th 

March." 

1729. 9, "The 12th November, 1729, was born Olimpe 

Dupuy* Dupui, daughter of Jean Jaque Dupui and of 

Susane Dupui; was baptized by Mr. Swift; had for 

godfather, Jean Levilain, and for godmother, 

Philippe Dupui and Judith Dupui." 

1729. 10. "The 1st March, 1729, was born Estiene 

C]j|st^n/I5hastain, son of Estiene Chastain and of Martre, 

his wife; was baptized the 12 April following by 

Mr. Massom ; had for godfather, Jean Jaque Dupui 

and Estiene Farsi ; for godmother, Philipe Dupui." 

James n. "The 14th March, 1730 (1731), Jaque Soblet, 

^t^^^}' son of Pierre Louis Soblet and of Marie, his wife, 

1730 ' ' 

(1731) was baptized by Mr. Marye; he had for godfather, 

Jaque Soblet and Jaque Martain; for godmother, 

Janne Martain. The parties have declared that he 

was born the 3d of the month of .Tanuary, 1730 

(1731)." 

1730 12. "20th February, 1730 (1731), Marie Dupui, 

Man^^ daughter of Pierre and of Judith Dupui, was born ; 

Dupuy. was baptized by Mr. Marye the 28th of March fol- 

fBraeket "Ma." The brackets were entered in the Register 
by Dr. Brock. 



BAPTISxMAL REGISTER. 145 

lowing ; had for godfather, Jean Levilain ; for god- chap. ii. 
mother, Philipe Vilain." 

13. "Marye Villain, daughter of Jean Villain and Marye 
of Philipe Villain, was born the 2d 8ber, 1731 ; was Levilain. 
baptized by Mr. Marye the 27 8ber following; had ^'^^* 
for godfather, Barthelemi Dupuy; for godmother, 

mad. Dupui and md. Chastain." 

14. "The 7th February, 1732 (1733), was born 1732 
Isaac Dupuy, son of Pierre Dupuy and of Judith (^733). 
Dupuy; was baptized by Mr. Marye; had for god- Dupuy. 
father, Jaque Brian and Antoine Villain; for 
godmother, Elizabeth Brian." 

15. "The 21st August, 1732, was born a boy to ^^732- 
Francoi Dupuy, his name is Jean." Dupuy. 

16. "The 23d April, 1733, was born Bainjamain 1^33, 
Soblet, son of Pierre Louis Soblet and of Marte, his Benjamin 
wife; had for godfather, gedeon Chanbon and Subiett. 
Wollter Stot; for godmother, Anne David." 

17. "The 28th May, 1733, was borne Susane Vil- 1733. 
lain, daughter of Jean Villain and of Philipe, his Susanna 
wife; was baptized the 7th of July; had for god- ^^"^^^°' 
father, Pierre Dupuy; for godmother, Judith 
Dupuy and Susane Dupuy." 

18. "The 25th April, 1734, was born Susane 1734. 
Dupuy, daughter of Jean Jaque Dupuy and of Susanna 
Susane Dupuy; had for godfather, Pierre Dupuy; "^ ^' 
for godmother, Philipe Vilain and Brogit Melone." 

19. "The 11th 8ber, 1734, was born Judith Du- 1734- 
puy, daughter of Pierre Dupuy and of Judith Ju<iith 
Dupuy; had for godfather, Jean Levilain, Jr." " ^' 
(This date of birth seems to be corrected in 
entrv 28. Author.) 

20. "The 8th 8ber, 1734, was born Judith Dupuy, 1734. 
daughter of Francoi Dupuy and of Mary Dupuy, Judith 
his wife; had for godfather, Pierre Dupuy; for god- "^"^' 
mother, Judith Dupuy and Philipe Villain." 

21. "The 12th 8ber,'l735, was born Jean Villain, 1735. 
son of Jean Villain, the younger, and of Philipe, J<?**° 
his wife; had for godfather, Jean Vilain, his grand- ^^ ^*°* 
father; for godmother, Charlote Chastain." 



146 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

Chap. I I. 22. ''The 2d Xber, 1735, was born Ester Guerant, 

1735. daughter of Pierre Guerrant and of Magdelaine 

_^^*^" Guerant; for godfather, Guilieaume Salle; for 

■godmother, Elizabet Salle and Judith Trabu; 

baptized the 18th March, 1735 (1736)." 

1735 23. "The 26th February, 1735 (1736), was born 

(^736). Marie Dupuy, daughter of Jean Jaque Dupuy and 

DupIJ of Susane, his wife." 

1736.' 24. "The 28th 7ber, 1736, was born Marie Mag- 

Magda- delaine Dupuy, daughter of Pierre Dupuy and of 

Dupuy. Judith Dupuy; had for godfather, Jean Jaque 

Dupuy ; for godmother, Marie Chastain and Philipe 

Vilain." 

1737. 25. "The 28th 9ber, 1737, was born to Jean 

EiizabethLevilain, a daughter named Elizabet; had for god- 

evi am. j^^j^^j,^ Estiene Chastain ; for godmother, Elizabet 

l^rian and Martre Chastain." 
1737. 26. "The 17th Xber, 1737, was born Pierre 
Peter Qy^Pa^jj^ son of Pierre Gueran and of Magdelaine, 
uerran .^^.^ wife; had for godfather, Pierre David; for god- 
mother, Anne David, the younger ; Pierre Guerant, 
the younger." 

1737 ^^- ''"^^^ ^'^*^ March, 1737 (1738), was born 
(1738). Jean Dupuy, son of Jean ^ Jaque Dupuy and of 
John Susane, his wife ; had for godfather, Jean Levilain, 
the younger; for godmother, Marte Chastain; was 
baptized by Mr. Brook." 
1^34, 28. "Judith Dupuy, daughter of Pierre Dupuy 
Judith and of Judith Dupuy, his wife, was born the 
Dupuy. 24th June, 1734." (Seems to be a correction of 
entry 19. Author.) 
,740, 29. "The 4th 7ber, 1740, was born Elizabet 
Elizabeth Dupuy, daughter of Jean Jaque Dupuy and 
Dupuy. ^j£ Susane, his wife; had for godfather, Jean 
Barthelemi Dupuy ; for godmother, Elizabet Porter 
and Marie Chastain." 
1740. 30. "The 31st August, 1740, was born Magdelaine 
Magda- Guerant, daughter of Pierre Guerran and of Mag- 
G ^rr\t ^^^^^^^^' ^^^ wife; had for godfather, Jean Trabu; 
'for godmother, her mother and Clere Trabu." 



BAPTISMAL KEGISTER. 147 

31. "The 13tli 9ber, 1743, was born Chastain C hap, i i. 
Cocke, son of Jamse Cocke and Marie, his wife; 1743, 
had for godfather, Jean Jaque Diipuy and Hanry Chastain 
Godse; for godmother, Anne David, the younger." °^ ^' 

32. "The 29th January, 1744 (1745), was born 1744- 
Jaque Dupuy, son of Jean Jaque Dupuy and of J^^^^s 
Susane, his wife." ^v^y- 

33. "Judith Farci, daughter of Estienne Fare! oiympia 
and of Marie, his wife, was born the 19th of Oc- ^^v^v- 
tober, 1744 ; had for godfather, Thomas Smith ; for 
godmother, Marie Farci and Olimpe Dupuy." 

34. "The 17th 8ber, 1745, was born Judith ^^45-^ 
Gueran, daughter of Pierre Gueran and of Mag-Querrant. 
dalaine, his wife; had for godfather, Estine 
Watkins; for godmother, Marie Trabu and Judith 
Bernar." 

35. "The 21st May, 1747, was born Marie*Dupuy, 1747- 
daughter of Jean Jaque Dupuy and of Susane, his Martha 
wife ; had for godfather, Jean Trabu ; for god- oiySTp^k 
mother, Olimpe, his wife." Trabu. 

3G. "The 23d April, 1748, was born Daniel 1748. 
Gueran, son of Pierre Gueran, and of Magdelaine Oiympia 
Gueran, his wife; had for godfather, David Lesueur 
and Jean Gueran ; for .godmother, Olimpe Trabu." 

"Jean Chastain, Clerk." 

Quotations from "Fragment op a Register op 

Deaths." 

1. "The 12th January, 1722 (1723), died Janne Death of 

Chastain, daughter of ieur Chastain and o^pJ*°^. 

Anne Chastain, her father and mother, aged about ^^*^°- 
6 years; was buried the thirteenth of the month, 

on Sunday, at three o'clock in the afternoon." 

2. "3 April, 1723, died Anne Soblet, the — sieur D^^th of 

Pierre Chastain, aged about years ; was buried Anne 

the fourth of the month." Subiett. 

3. "January, 1723 (1724), died the Sieur An-Deathof 
thony (Trabue?), aged about fifty-six or seven Anthony 
years ; was buried the 30th of the same." (Trabue). 



*In hi3 will her name is "Martha." See No. 23. 



148 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

C hap. 1 1. 4. "August, 1724, died Mariane n Chastain ; 

Death of aged 28 years ; was buried the 21st of the same 

Manane month at five o'clock in the afternoon." 
'^^'''^°' J. Soblet, Clerk. 
Martha 5. "The 24th December, 1725, died Marthe , 

'wife to Monsieur Estiene Chastain; aged about 

fifty- two or three years." 

Jean Chastain. 

Quotations from "A List of King William 
Parish. — June, 1744." 

John James Dupuy, Dick, Betty 3 

John Jamest Levilin, Betty 2 

John Levilin, Jack, Dick, Mary, Nan 5 

James Cocke, Henry Godsie, Jack, Dick, Sarah, 

Hannah, Betsy, Jane 8 

Peter Soblet 1 

Peter Louis Soblet , . . . 1 

Peter Guerrant, John J 

Chastain, Jno. Chastain, Jun., Charles, Prince, 

Belinda 5 

Louis Soblet 1 

Jno. Bartholomew Dupuy 1 

Jacob Trabu 4 

Legal Documents. 

Deed of Bartholomew Dupuy to Peter Dupuy. 

1737. To All Christian People to whom these presents 

B^^^th°f sli^ll come, I, Bartholomew Dupee of the County 

omew of Goochland Sendeth Greetings. Know ye that I 

Dupuy. the sd Barthow Dupee for Divers good causes and 

considerations and thereunto moving but more 

Especially for and in consideration of the true 

Love and Natural effection which I bear to my 

Loving Son Peter Dupee of the County aforesaid 

have given granted aliened confirmed & do by these 

presents frely Clearly fully and absolutely give 

grant allien makeover and confirm unto the sd 

fHis descendants claim that his name was John "Peter." 



LEGAL DOCUMENTS. 149 

Peter Dupee his heirs and assigns One certain tract Chap. ii. 
or parcel of Land Containing One Hundred and 1737. 
Thirty three acres Lying and being in Goochland Deed of 
County aforesaid, and on the South side of James Barthoi- 

oni6w 

River & bounded as followeth (to wit) Beginning Dupuy. 
at a corner black Oak standing on the South side 
of Lower Manakin Creek thence East thirty nine 
degrees South one hundred and thirty poles to five 
white oaks and two gums thence South thirty three 
degrees West one hundred and sixty poles to a 
Corner pine thence West thirty nine Degrees North 
one hundred and Seventy poles to two pines one 
white oak & two gums Standing on the Manakin 
Creek thence down the creek according to its 
Meanders One Hundred and Ninety six poles to the 
first Station. To have and to hold and peaceably 
to Enjoy the aforesd Land and premises from the 
Claim right or title of me the sd Bartholomew 
Dupee my heirs and Executors &c or any other 
person or persons whatsoever to the only proper 
use and behoof of him the sd Peter Dupee his heirs 
& assigns with all Houses, orchids, woods, ways 
Under-woods & water courses with all and singular 
the improvements and Appurtenances thereunto 
belonging & I the sd Barthow Dupee for my 
Self Heirs Executors and Adminis's doth covent, 
promice & agree to and with the sd Peter Dupee 
his Heirs and Assigns that from and after the date 
of these presents hath not, nor ought to have any 
the least right or title intrest Claym or demand in 
or to the premises aforesaid but the same be and 
is thence forward vested unto the sd Peter Dupee 
his Heirs and Assigns forever in fee simple & fur- 
ther I the sd Bartholmew Dupee for my Self Heirs 
Executors and Administrators doth Covenant 
promise and agree yt the right title Interest profit 
priveledge and Sole property of the sd Land and 
Premises against our selves and Every of Our Heirs 
Executors and Administrators and against all other 
persons whatsoever will warrt and forever defend 
by these presents unto the sd Peter Dupee his Heirs 



150 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

C hap. I I. and assigns forever. In Witness whereof I the sd 
Bartholomew Dupee have hereunto set my hand 
and Seal this 13th day of March 1737. 

Barthelleux dupuy. Seal. 

Signed Sealed and Delivered in presence of us. 

his 
John Chastain, William Salle, John X Burner. 

mark 
At a Court held for Goochland County March 
21st 1737 This Deed from Bartholomew Dupuy 
to Peter Dupuy was proved by the oaths of William 
Sallee and John Burner Witnesses thereto to be 
the Act and Deed of the said Bartholomew Dupuy 
which was ordered to be recorded. 
A Copy Teste : 

Moses T. Monteiro, Clerk. 
Deed Book 3. p. 78. 

Deed op Bartholomew Dupuy to John Peter 

Bilbo. 

1738. This Indenture made y'. Twentieth day of Feb- 
Barthoi- ruary in the Year of Our Lord One Thousand Seven 
omew Hundred an Thirty Eight and Ye. Eleventh year of 
Dupuy. ye_ Keign of our Sovereign Lord ye. King &c. Be- 
tween Bartholomew Deppee of Goochland County 
and King William Parrish Planter of the one part 
and John Peter Bilbo of ye. aforesd County and 
Parrish Planter of the other Witnesseth yt. te. sd. 
Bartholomew Deppee for and in consideration of 
ye. sum of Twenty Seven pounds Current Money 
of Virginia to him in hand paid at or before ye 
Ensealing and Delivery of these presents ye. Re- 
ceipt whereof he ye. sd. Bartholomew Deppee doth 
hereby Acknowledge Hath Given granted Bar- 
gained Sold Enfeoffed and Confirmed and by these 
presents doth Give Grant Bargain Sell Enfeoff and 
confirm unto ye. sd. John Peter Bilbo and to his 
Heirs and Assigns forever One Tract or parcell of 
Land Situate Lying and Being in ye. Manakin 



LEGAL DOCUMENTS. 151 

Town in ye. County and Parrish aforesd. and is Chap, ii. 
bounded on Francis Salee on both Sides Containing 1738. 
by Estimation Thirty four Acres being part of ye Deed of 
Five Thousand Acres of Land Surveyed for ye^^^^^^^*^- 

omcw 

French Refugees with all appertainances belonging Dupuy. 
thereunto And ye sd John Peter Bilbo To Have 
And To Hold ye. sd. tract or parcell of Land unto 
ye. sd. John Peter Bilbo his Heirs Executors Ad- 
ministrators and Assigns forever and ye. Bartholo- 
mew Deppee doth for himself and his Heirs &c 
further covenant and agree to and with ye. sd. John 
Peter Bilbo his Heirs &c. yt. he ye. sd. Bartholomew 
Deppee his Heirs &c. ye. above Sold Land and 
Premises unto ye. above sd. John Peter Bilbo his 
Heirs and Assigns against him ye. sd. Bartholomew 
Deppee and his Heirs and against all other persons 
whatsoever shall and will warrant and by these 
presents forever defend In Witness whereof ye. sd. 
Bartholomew Deppee hereunto Set his Hand and 
Seal ye. day & year above written. 

Barthelleux Dupuy. Seal. 

Signed Sealed & Delivered in ye presence of us. 

his 
Peter Guerrant, Anthony Trabue, Peter X Depee. 

mark 
Memorandom yt. ye Twentieth of February in 
ye. year of our Lord One Thousand Seven Hundred 
and Thirty Eight peaceable possession and Seizer 
is delivered by ye. within named Bartholomew 
Deppee to ye. Avithin named John Peter Bilbo in 
their proper parsons according to ye. Tenour of ye. 
within writen deed. Barthellemy Dupuy. 

Signed in ye presence of us. 

Peter Gu errant, Anthony Trabue, Peter Depee. 

At a Court held for Goochland County March 
21st 1738 This Deed with the Livery of Seizin en- 
dorsed from Bartholomew Dupuy to John Peter 
Bilbo was proved by the oaths of Peter Guerrant, 
Anthony Trabue and Peter Dupuy Witnesses 



152 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

C hap. I I. thereto to be the Act and Deed of the said Barthol- 
omew Dupuy which was ordered to be recorded. 

A Copy Teste : Moses T. Monteiro, Clerk. 
Deed Book 3, p. 82. 

Will of Martha Chastain. 

^.740- In the name of God Amen. I Martha Chastain 
Martha of the Parrish of King William in the County of 
Chastain.Goochland Detained with a violent and Dangerous 
Sickness, Calling to remembrance the uncertainty 
of the time of the Death and the Shortness of this 
miserable life but by the Grace of God having still 
a Sound and perfect memory I make my Testament 
and declare my last Will in manner and form fol- 
lowing viz. first I resigne my Soul to God my 
Creator which is the maker of it in hopes of Pardon 
and Remission of all my Sins on the merits and 
passions of my Savior and Redeemer Jesus Christ 
Dead for me. Secondly I leave my body to be 
Decently Enterred according to the prudence of my 
hereafter mentioned Executor. 

Item. I give and Bequeath unto my Beloved 
Daughter Mary Magdelane Chastain this planta- 
tion which I now dwell upon and all my other Land 
Devised me by my Husband Stephen Chastain con- 
taining three hundred and fourteen acres. I also 
give my Daughter Mary Magdelane Chastain all 
my part of the Negros Devised me by my Husband 
with all the movable and unmovable forever except 
what I shall hereafter give in this my last Will and 
Testament but if in case shee should die under age 
or unmarried having no issue then my Will is that 
the above said Land and movables I give to be 
Equally Divided between my Brothers Peter Du- 
puy, John James Dupuy & John Levilain Jun'r. 
but if my Daughter Mary Magdelane Chastain 
should be married and die under age & without 
Issue then only the Land & Negros to return to my 
Brother Peter Dupuy John James Dupuy & John 
Levilain Jun. & the movables to be her husbands. 



LEGAL DOCUMENTS. 153 

Item. I give to my Brother Peter Diipuy and chap. ii. 
John levilain Junor my brother in law all my part ^740! 
of money that is in the house and all my part of win of 
money that is due to me by Edward & William ^^^^^^ 
Hampton & Mathew Agee for to be Equally divided 
between them for them & their heirs forever after 
ye five pounds taken out of ye above mentioned 
money to Satisfie Barbara Dutoys legatie & four 
pounds to satisfie John Farcy legatie the remainder 
to be Peter Dupuys & John Levilains Junor forever. 

Item. I give to Barbara Dutoy five pound Cur- 
rant money for her & her heirs forever. 

Item. I give to John Farcy Son of Stephen 
Farcy four pounds Currant money for him & his 
heirs forever. 

Item. I give to the Poor of King William Par- 
rish Two pounds Ten Shillings to be paid in Wheat 
& Corn, ye wheat at three shillings pr Bushell & 
ye corn at one and sixpence pr. Bushell. 

Item. I give unto my Brother John James 
Dupuy one parcell of Land Devised me by my hus- 
band Stephen Chastain which he bought of Jacob 
Capoon Containing forty six acres on the South 
side James River Joining ye widow Carner & John 
Haris. I also give him the said John James Dupuy 
ray part in two Beds with ye Bed Cloths. I also 
give him my part in a Bay horse branded on the 
buttock E C and called by the name Robine. I 
also give him all my Grain with ye meat & tobacco 
to maintain & Clothe ye Negros this year. I also 
give him my part of all ye depts due except ye 
Depts of Edward & William Hampton and Mathew 
Agee. And my Will is that my Brother John 
James Dupuy shall have the use of all my Land 
and the use of all my part of ye Negros and the 
profits that shall arise from them until my Daughter 
Mary IMagdelaue Chastain shall have attained the 
age of eighteen years for ye maintaining of my 
Daughter & my part of Negros for him and his 
heirs forever. 



154 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

C hap. I I. Item. My will is that my part in ye Bed and 

1740. furniture a new trunk last bought & what is in it, 

Martha ^ ^^^S^ Cubberd & what is in, three Gold Rings two 

Chastain.hlack walnut Tables, a box Iron one pr. hand Irons, 

one brass Cettle a side saddle and all my wearing 

apparrel. Not to be appraised nor one piece thread 

not to be appraised. 

Item. I declare by this my Testament that I 
Constitute and ordain my Brother John James 
Dupuy to be my Lawful Executor and Administra- 
tor of this my last Will and Testament. 

Item. I intend and will have this my Testa- 
ment to be Executed after my Death declaring that 
it is my last Will and for this Effect I renounce to 
all laws & Customs if any be Contrary to my 
Intention in testimony thereof I have Set my hand 
and Seal to it after I have heard it read Witness 
this 23rd of April 1740. 

her 
Martha X Chastain. Seal, 
mark 
Signed Sealed & Declared in presence of Thos. 
Porter, Jean Pierre Bilbout, David Lefueur. 
At a Court held for Goochland County May 20th 
1740. This Will was proved by the oaths of Thomas 
Porter, Jean Pierre Bilbout and David Lefueur to 
be the act and Deed of Martha Chastain, deced. 
which was ordered to be recorded. 
A Copy Teste: 

Moses T. Monteiro, Clerk. 
Deed Book 3, p. 285. 

Receipt of James Cocke. 

1742, Know all men by these presents that I, James 

Receipt Cocke of the County of Henrico Hath this day re- 

Tam ceived of John James Dupuy of Goochland the 

CoS^e! Sum of ninety four pounds thirteen shillings & five 

pence one-fourth Currant Money in full of my wife 

(Mary Magdalene Chastain) Estate left her by 

her father Stephen Chastain & also what was left 



LEGAL DOCUMENTS. 155 

my wife Mary Magdalene by her Mother's last Chap, ii. 
Will and Testament Excepting some Particulars 1742. 
Enumerated in the said Wills which I have also Receipt 
this day reced from the said Jno. James Dupuy as ,^ 
also the Stock of Cattle Sheep & Hogs & my wifes cocke. 
full share of what has been made & rais'd since 
her Fathers & Mothers death & doth by these pres- 
ents acquit and Discarge the said John James Du- 
pey from all matters and things relating to my 
Wife's Estate to all Intents & Purposes whatso- 
ever. In Witness whereof I hath hereunto set my 
hand & seal this 17th day of November 1742. 

James Cocke. Seal. 
Sealed & Delivered before Richard Deane, John 
Vilain. 

At a Court held for Goochland County Decem- 
ber 21, 1742 James Cocke acknowledged this Writ- 
ing to be his Act and Deed which was ordered to 
be recorded. 

A Copy Teste: 

Moses T. Monteiro, Clerk. 

Deed Book No. 4, p. 107. 

The Will of Bartholomew Dupuy. 

In the name of God Amen. I, Bartholomew Du- 1743- 
puy of Goochland County and in King William ^J^^oi. 
Parrish Virginia being Sick in body but of good omew 
and perfect memory thanks be to the Almighty Dupuy. 
God, and calling to remembrance the uncertain es- 
tate of this transitory life, and that all flesh must 
yield unto death, when it shall please the Almighty 
God to call, do make Constitute ordain and declare 
this to be my last Will and Testament and none 
other and in manner and form following, Revokin 
and Annuling by these presents all and every 
Testament or Testaments Will or Wills heretofore 
by me made or declared, either by word or writing 
and this only to be taken only for my last Will 
and Testament and none other. And first being 
penitent and sorry from the bottom of my heart 



156 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

Chapji. for my Sins past most humbly desiring forgivenesa 
1743. for the same. I give and Commit my Soul unto the 
slrthoi ^^°^^Stity God my Savior and Redeemer, In whom 
oLew ^^^ by whose merits I trust and believe assuredly 
Dupuy. to be saved and to have full remission and for- 
giveness for all my Sins past, and that my Soul 
with my body at the General day of Resurrection 
shall rise again with joy, and through the merits 
of Christs death and passion possess and Inherit 
the Kingdom of Heaven prepared for his Elect and 
Chosen. And me body to be decently buried in such 
place as it shall please my Executors hereafter 
named, and for the better settling my Temporal 
Instate Such Goods Chatties and implements as it 
has pleased the Almighty God to bestow on me 
above my deserts, I order and dispose the same in 
manner and form following, That is to say I will 
that those debts and Duties as I owe in Right and 
Conscience to any manner of person or persons 
whatsoever shall be well and truly Contented and 
paid or ordained to be paid within Convenient time 
after my decease by my Executor, hereafter named. 

Item. I give and bequeath to my Eldest Peter 
Dupuy five pounds Virginia Currency, to him and 
his heirs forever. 

Item. I give and bequeath to my son John James 
Dupuy Ten pounds Virginia Currency, to him and 
his heirs forever. 

Item. I give and bequeath to my Grandson 
John Bartholomew Dupuy Son to Peter Dupuy 
two pounds Virginia Currency, to him and his 
heirs forever. 

Item. I give and bequeath to the poor of King 
William Parrish five pounds Current money. 

Item. My will and desire is that my son in Law 
John Levilain Junior, shall be Executor of this mv 
last Will and Testament. And further I give and 
bequeath all my whole and sole Estate that I shall 
have and possess at my death unto my aforesaid 
Son in Law John Levilain, to him and his heirs 
forever, and I do acknowledge this to be my last 



LEGAL DOCUMENTS. 157 

Will and Testament and none other, and I re- Chap. ii. 
nounce to all Laws and Customs that are Contrary 1743. 
to this my last Will and Testament. win of 

As Witness my hand and seal this 7th day of ^*^*^^oi- 
March 1742-3. Dupuy. 

Bartholomew Dupuy. (Seal.) 
Signed Sealed and Delivered in the presence of us, 
John Gordon, Stephen Mallet, Stephen Wat- 
kins. 
At a Court held for Goochland County May 17, 
1743. This Will was proved by the Oaths of Ste- 
phen Mallet & Stephen Watkins Witnesses thereto 
to be the act and Deed of Bartholomew Dupuy 
Deced and was thereupon ordered to be recorded. 
A Copy Teste: 

Moses T. Monteiro, Clerk. 

The Will op John James Dupuy. 

In the name of God Amen, I John James Du- .J775- 
puy, of the parish of King William and Cumber- jq^q 
land Counties being in perfect sence and memory James 
thanks to almighty God do make this my last will ^"P^y- 
and testament in manner following. 

Imprimis, I give and devise to my son Barthol- 
omew Dupuy four hundred acres of land in Ame- 
lia County, it being the land whereon he now lives 
also a negro man named Ben and Doll and all her 
children in his possession, also my negro man Jack 
in my possession and their future increase also all 
my stock and household furniture there in his pos- 
session to him and his heirs forever. 

Item. I give & devise to my granddaughter Su- 
sanna Dupuy daughter of my son r.artholomew 
Dupuy one negro girl named Dilcy, when the said 
Susanna shall attain to the age of eighteen or mar- 
ried to her and her heirs forever. 

Item. I give and devise to my son John Dupuy 
two hundred acres of land which I purchased of 
John Durliam also three hundred acres part of the 
tract of land I now dwell on, to begin at the line 



158 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

Chap. II. at the lake going streight from thence to the mouth 

1775. of Tobeys branch running up the said branch to 

Will of the further side of my plantation to a little run 

jlunes tli^iice up the said run to Hancock's path and from 

Dupuy. thence streight forward to my upper line all the 

land to the south of this line are bounds be the 

same three hundred acres more or less to my said 

son John Dupuy and his heirs forever. Also I give 

to my son John Dupuy and his heirs, three negroes 

(to- wit) Philis and her child called Phil both in 

his possession, and one negro man named Tom I 

purchased of William Salley. 

Item. I give and devise to my son James Dupuy 
the remainder of my tract of land whereon I now 
dwell including the plantation and lying on the 
north side of his brother John Dupuys bounds and 
containing by estimation one hundred acres be the 
same more or less to him my said son James Du- 
puy and his heirs forever. I also give and bequeath 
to my said son James Dupuy two hundred acres of 
land which I bought of my brother Peter Dupuy 
adjoining the land I dwell on also two hundred 
acres of land being part of a tract of four hun- 
dred acres adjoining the lower Manikin creek to 
the south, to be divided across and my said son 
James to have the uper two hundred acres adjoin- 
ing Peter Depps' line to him my said son James 
and his heirs forever. I also give to my said son 
James Dupuy and his heirs Four negroes (to-wit) 
Peter, Hanner and her child called Jupe and a 
boy I raised named Tom, and the future increase 
of Hanner, also fifty pounds cash to be paid out of 
my estate, likewise one feather bed and furniture, 
ten head of cattle, two ews and lambs four sows 
and pigs to him and his heirs forever. 

Item. I give and devise to my daughter Olimph 
Trabue two hundred acres of land on Ellisses fork 
Amelia County the said land being already in her 
possession also four negroes, to-wit, Stephen a 
negro and Temp a negro girl both in her posses- 
sion, a negro woman named Bettie and her daugh- 



LEGAL DOCUMENTS. 159 

ter named Jene both in my possession, and their C hap, i i. 
future increase, to my said daughter Olimp Tra- 1775. 
bue and her heirs forever. I also give to my said win of 
daughter one feather bed and furniture. james 

Item. I give and devise to my grandson Benja- Dupuy. 
min Hatcher one hundred and ninety acres of land 
lying on the head of Flat creek in Amelia county 
being one moiety of a tract of three hundred and 
eighty acres patented in my own name the other 
moiety of which I loned to my daughter Martha 
Foster during her life, and the said tract of three 
hundred and eighty acres being already divided, 
my will is that if my said daughter should go to 
live on the same before my said gTandson attains 
to the age of twenty one years she may have her 
choice of a moiety thereof out if she does not settle 
before my grandson comes of age then he to chose 
which moiety he thinks proper to hold the same to 
him and his heirs forever. 

Item. I give and bequeath to my daughter 
Mary Hatcher and her heirs the following negroes, 
to-wit, Moll and all her children and «Toe a negro 
boy they all being in her possession, also Charles 
a negro man and Frank a negro boy now in my 
possession with a feather bed and furniture. 

Item. I give and devise to my daughter Eliza- 
beth Dupuy two hundred acres of land being the 
lower half of my tract of four hundred acres lying 
on the lower Manakin creek the upper half of 
which I have devised to my son James Dupuy, and 
negroes to-wit, one negro man named Joe, one ne- 
gro woman named Nell with her child called Luce 
a negro woman named Sara and a boy named 
Plandol and their future increase to my said 
daughter and her heirs forever, also one feather 
bed and furniture, one side saddle, two cows and 
calves and two ews and lambs. 

Item. I lend to my daughter ;Martha Foster 
during her life one hundred and ninety acres of 
land on the head of Flat creek in Amelia county 
being a moiety of a tract of three hundred and 



160 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCJIONS. 

C hap. I I. eighty acres patented in my own name the other 

1775. half of which I have devised to my grandson Ben- 

Wiii of jamin Hatcher, and the death of my said daughter, 

James ^ ^^^^ ^^^ devise the said one hundred and ninety 

Dupuy. acres of land to my grandson George Foster and 

his heirs forever. 

Item. I give and devise to my daughter Martha 
Foster four negroes (to- wit) one negro woman 
named Luce and a negro boy named Joe which I 
bought of Lightfoots estate both now in her pos- 
session, also a negro man named Dick and a negro 
woman called great Jane both in my possession 
with the future increase of Luce and Jane to her 
and her heirs forever. 

Item. I give and devise to my grand daughter 
Susanna Foster thirty pounds current money to 
be paid to her when she shall attain to the age of 
eighteen years or married, to be paid out of my es- 
tate by my executors to her and her heirs forever. 

Item. I give and devise to my grandson John 
Lockett son of my daughter Susanna Lockett two 
hundred acres of land which his father James 
Lockett has now in possession lying on Ellisses 
fork in Amelia countv to him my said son John 
Lockett and his heirs forever. 

Item. I give and devise to my grandsons James, 
Joel and Brittaen Locketts sons of my daughter 
Susanna Lockett dec'd. sixty pounds current 
money to be equally divided among them when they 
arrive to the age of twenty one years and if either 
die before they come of age then their parts to be 
equally divided among the survivors, to be paid out 
of my estate by my executors, to them and their 
heirs forever. It is also my will that my negro 
man Jupiter be sold by my executors and the 
money arising from the sale be equally divided 
amongst my three grandsons, James, Joel, and 
Brittain Locketts, to be paid them or the survivors 
of them when they come to the age of twenty one 
years respectively by my executors. 



LEGAL DOCUMENTS. 161 

Item. I give to my beloved wife a mare called Chap, i i. 
Roauoke and a side saddle and bridle. 1775. 

My will further is that all my stock not hereto- Wiiiof 
fore mentioned or given away in my will, consist- f^^g^ 
ing of horses, cattle, sheep and hogs, with the wheel Dupuy. 
carriages be sold to raise money to pay the legacies 
given in this will. 

Item. I give and devise to my grand daughter 
Susanna Trabue thirty pounds current money to be 
paid to her when she shall attain to the age of 
eighteen or married to her and her heirs forever. "^'--^ 

Item. I give and devise to my grand daughter 
Susanna Hatcher thirty pounds current money to 
be paid her when she shall attain to the age of 
eighteen years or married to her and her heirs for- 
ever. 

Item. I give and devise to my grand daughter 
Mary Foster twenty pounds current money to be 
paid her by my executors when she shall attain 
the age of eighteen years or married to her and her 
heirs forever. 

My desire is that after my stock of horses, cattle, 
sheep, and hogs, that I have willd. away are sold, 
the money in the house with which is due to me 
(after my debta are discharged) be all collected 
together if it is not sufficient to discharge the leg- 
ecies given by me in this will, that my seven chil- 
dren baer an equal part in making up the deficiency 
and if there is any money left after the legecies are 
paid, it to be equally divided among my seven sur- 
viving children. 

Item. I give and bequeath to my son James Du- 
puy my household furniture with all belonging to 
me that I have not mentioned or given away in 
this my last will and testament to him and his 
heirs forever. 

My will is that my estate be not appraised. 

Lastly, I appoint my two sons Bartholomew Du- 
puy and James Dupuy and my son in law Benja- 
min Hatcher, executors of this my last will and 



162 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

C hap. I I. testament hereby revoking all wills by me hereto- 

1775. fore made. 
Will of In Witness Whereof I have hereunto set my 
John hand and affixed my seal this ninth day of Feb- 
Du^^y. ruary one thousand seven hundred and seventy 
five. 

John Ja. Dupuy. L. S. 
Signed sealed published and delivered by the tes- 
tator as his last will and testament in presents 
of us who have subscribed our names as wit- 
nesses hereto. Wm. Street, James Bryant, 
junr., Benjamin Watkins. 
At a Court held for Cumberland County the 27th 
February, 1775. This last will and testament of 
John James Dupuy deceased was exhibited in 
Court by James Dupuy and Benjamin Hatcher two 
of the executors therein named and the same was 
proved by the witnesses thereto and ordered to be 
recorded and on the motion of the said executors 
who made oath according to law certificate is 
granted them for obtaining a probate thereof in 
due form giving security. Whereupon they to- 
gether with Samuel Hobson and Thomas Haskins 
their sureties entered into bond according to law 
and liberty is reserved to the other executor to 
join in probat. 

Teste Thompson Swann, Clerk. 

A copy, Teste, R. O. Garrett, Deputy Clerk. 
In the offices of Goochland, Cumberland, 
Powhatan and Amelia counties, Ya. may be 
found many Legal Documents such as the 
foregoing. Many of them, as the transfers of 
real estate, are of little importance. The 
author has been able to visit only the Henrico 
and Goochland offices, and has been unable 
by correspondence to find the will of Peter 
Dupuy, and of other early settlers. 



OLD LETTERS. 163 

The following letter was written by Jolinchap.a 
Dupuy of Kentucky. He was born in King 
William Parish, Va., March 17, 1738, and was 
a son of John James Dupuy, and a Baptist 
minister. He moved to Kentucky in 1784. 
It is probably addressed to Dr. William Jones 
Dupuy, born 1792, a descendant of Peter 
Dupuy, who lived in Dinwiddle County, Va., 
as it was found among the papers of his 
brother, Joseph Dupuy, and a copy forwarded 
to the author by Judge James A. Dupuy, son 
of Joseph Dupuy. 

30th January 1814. 
Brother William: I received your friendly let- 1814. 
ter and the Minutes of Several Associations and Letter of 

Rev 

thank you for them. I have taken notice of your john 
request to give you what information I could con- Dupuy. 
cerning the Emigration of the French refugees, 
which I shall take pleasure in doing and recording 
the noble deeds of my Ancestors who left their 
country, not fearing the wrath of the King "but 
endured as seeing Him who is invisible." 

My grandfather's name was Bartholomew Du- 
puy, he was born in France about the year 1650 
or 1653. At the age of 18 enlisted in the French 
army as a Common Soldier, served 14 years and 
in that time arose to the command of Lieutenant 
and was often sent out on recruiting business and 
had Captain's pay. He fought 14 battles in Flan- 
ders besides skirmishes and duels and the Lord 
preserved him through all. Their manner of fight- 
ing was as follows : — Once a year they fought a 
pitched battle in Flanders with 100,000 men on 
each side and fought three days successively. The 
first day the armies fired at each other the whole 
day and at night slept on the ground. The second 
and third days passed the same way until 11 o'clk 
a. m. of the third, when they laid down their guns, 



164 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

C hap. I I. drew their swords and ran to meet each other and 

Letter off aught hand to hand till the armies were so thinned 

^^- Jy°-that one or the other of them gave way. You may 

know that the carnage was exceeding great. 

At the expiration of 14 years my grandfather left 
the army and went home to pass a retired life. He 
had money enough to settle himself comfortably, 
bought a vineyard for fifty pounds and married a 
wife. 

In 1685 his most Christian Majesty, Louis XIV, 
revoked the Edict of Nantes which afforded tolera- 
tion to the Protestants. His Majesty would have 
no heretics in his dominions, all his subjects must 
be Christians and every person must be a Roman 
Catholic or die. Inquisitors were appointed to go 
from house to house, to enquire whether people 
would turn — if they refused they were immediately 
apprehended, and if they continued impenitent 
were forthwith put to death. The manner of the 
death of some of them was as follows: — A cask 
was armed with short nails driven through the 
staves, and the culprit or rather the victim was put 
in the cask, headed, and rolled to and fro to punish 
him for his obstinacy, till they had tortured him 
sufficiently for his rebellion, when the cask was 
rolled into the river and let go adrift. Another 
mode was this — they had pinchers to pluck out 
the finger nails and the toe-nails in order to make 
them say, "I will turn," and if the culprit contin- 
ued obstinate one of his arms were broken and a 
pail of coal water poured on it to increase the pain 
and after an hour the other arm was treated in like 
manner and then the legs. After a lapse of four 
hours a red hot iron was put to the breast which 
gave the finishing stroke. Sometimes they used 
the iron-boot to press the leg with screws to compel 
them to say, "I will turn," and sometimes they 
would pardon them and sometimes put them to 
death instantly, unless they should apostatize. 
Some were burned and some were drowned. Thus 



OLD LETTEiRS. 165 

you see "The tender mercies of the wicked are Chap, i i. 

cruel." Letter of 

One day the Priest came to my grandfather's ^^^• 
house with six men. He drew (his sword) and Dupuy. 
told them to stand off. The Priest told him that 1814, 
he must be taken and if need be he could get more 
men. My grandfather told him that he wanted only 
a little time to consider and take advice and then 
he would surrender himself. The Priest said that 
his request was reasonable and that he would 
grant it cheerfully, so they parted good friends. 
Immediately my grandfather went across the street 
to a tailor's shop and told the tailor to make a suit 
of men's clothes for his wife, to have them done in 
six hours and keep the secret. At midnight the 
clothes were done. She put them on and passed for 
his 8ervit07\ They immediately started, my 
grandfather wearing his military dress and sword 
and passed for a captain of the army, he having 
often traveled the country in that garb on the re- 
cruiting service. Thev traveled either 14 or 18 
days before they got out of France, were stopped 
every day to give an account of themselves, for 
there were guards at every crossing place ; but they 
escaped by his saying that he was the King's oJ0fi- 
cer. He had many narrow escapes but at last got 
over the line and sat down and sang the praises of 
God in the 40th Psalm. 

Germany rejoiced to see their Protestant breth- 
ren who had escaped out of the jaws of the lion and 
mourned that so many were massacred. It fired 
the souls of the protestants; their ministers were 
burning and shining lights; the praises of the Re- 
deemer resounded through the land as it did in 
Virginia in the time of the great revival. Thou- 
sands escaped by one strategy or other and thou- 
sands were put to the most barbarous deaths. 

The refugees remained in Germany about 14 
years. By this time the King of England in order 
to strengthen his Kingdom, made encouraging pro- 
posals for them to repair to England. Numbers 



166 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

Chap. II . accepted and went. After they had been there two 
Letter of years the King of England issued a proclamation 
jS *^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^ would go to settle the new country 
Dupuy. called Virginia (after the Virgin Queen) that he 
1814. would pay their passage, give them as much land 
as they might want, find them provisions for one 
year and arms and ammunition to defend them- 
selves from the Indians, that they should enjoy 
what religion they pleased, take in what minister 
they pleased and expel him when they pleased, that 
they should have a parish to themselves and not be 
under the control of the government in respect to 
their parochial affairs, which privilege they enjoy 
to this day. 

In the year 1700 great numbers of Huguenots 
landed in America, some on James River and some 
on the Rappahannock. They selected as their 
place of residence the Ma'nikintown, an old deserted 
village of the Manikin Indians and settled on the 
banks of the river. Each settler took a small strip 
of land running from the river to the foot of the 
hill. As well as I recollect the settlement ex- 
tended about 4 miles along the river. There the 
Huguenots built a house for the worship of God, 
in the centre of the settlement, here they had wor- 
ship twice a day on the Sabbath, conducting the 
service after the manner of the Germans. Such 
sweet singing I have never heard since. They kept 
up worship in their families three times a day. 
They fixed the bounds of their parish and called it 
King William parish after the name of the King. 
There was no settlement nearer than Richmond- 
town, yet the Indians never hurt them. The Lord 
said "touch not my anointed and do my prophets 
no harm." 

There was no mill nearer than Falling Creek, 20 
miles distant and they had no horses but were 
obliged to carry their corn on their backs to the 
mill. When their children were grown up they had 
not land enough, they wrote to the King to request 
the grant of more land. He ordered ten thousand 



OLD LETTERS. 167 

acres more to be laid off and joined to their parish Chap. ii. 
bounds. 

Thus I have given you a narrative of what my 
father told me, to the best of my recollection. If 
anything in it will answer your purpose, I shall 
think myself well paid for my trouble. You must 
sort it as we do our frost-bitten corn. I have not 
corrected nor transcribed it. "The works of the 
Lord are great, sought out of all who take pleasure 
in them." Let children's children rehearse the 
great works of the Lord and the next age prolong 
His praise. 

I am, dear brother, yours, 

John Dupuy. 

Statement of Ebenezer Dupuy. 

Mr. Ebenezer Dupuy was a son of Rev. 
James Dupuy, who was a son of John James 
Dupuy. This old statement was forwarded 
the author by his daughter Mrs. Hulda C. 
(Dupuy) Harrison, of Grannis, Ark. 

Bartholomew Dupuy was born in France in the state- 
year 1652. He enlisted in the French army at 18 mentof 
years of age and was appointed Lieutenant, was in Dupuy^'^ 
14 battles in Flanders — besides skirmishes and 
duels; served 14 years and then retired to private 
life ; bought a Vineyard for £50 and married in the 
year 1685. 

Statement of Mrs. Susanna (Trabue) Ma,tor. 

Mrs. Major was a daughter of Olj^mpia 
(Dupuy) Trabue, who was a daughter of 
John James Dupuy, son of the progenitor. 
She was born in 1772. The statements were 
dictated in 1841, and were forwarded the 
author some years ago by Mr. A. T. Gunnell, 
attorney of Colorado Springs, Colo. 



168 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

Chap. I L Our old patriarch Dupuy had 4 children, 2 sons 
1841. and 2 daughters, one of his daughters married a 
ment of ^^^^^^^^ ^^^ ^^^ other daughter married Lavilan : 
Mrs. his 2 sons Peter Dupuy and John Dupuy ( who was 
Major, my Grandfather married Susanah Lavilan). Uncle 
Lavilan that married Philip Dupuy (a girl) had 
but one child who was a girl. She married Matthew 
Woodson, Aunt Chastine had but one daughter 
who married a man named Cock. Mother's father 
was Jno. James Dupuy, married Susanah Lavilan, 
they had sons and daughters, Bartholomew, John, 
James, Olymphia, Mary, Martha, Susana, Eliza- 
beth, — Bartholomew married a Miss Motly, John 
married Elizabeth Minter, James married Nancy 
Stark, Olymphia married Jno. James Trabue who 
was my father, Mary married Benjamin Hatcher, 
Martha married James Foster, Susana married 
Locket, Elizabeth married Adkerson, My father 
and mother were married about 1740 or 1744. 
They had sons and daughters, viz: James Trabue 
married Jane Porter, John Trabue died whilst a 
voung man, William Trabue married Elizabeth 
Haskins, Daniel Trabue married Mary Haskins, 
Edward Trabue married Martha Haskins, Stephen 
Trabue married Jane Haskins, Samuel Trabue 
died at 7 years of age, Magdaline married Edward 
Clay and moved into North Carolina, Jane mar- 
ried Joseph Minter, Mary married Lewis Sublett, 
IMartha married Josiah Wooldridge, Elizabeth 
married Fenelon Willson, Judith married John 
Major^, Susana married Thomas Major^, Phoebe 
died whilst young. Susana Trabue and Thomas 
Majors were married in 1795 (1793), they had 3 
•> children, 2 sons and 1 daughter, our oldest son 

}j Olive married Nancy Gunnell, our next son named 

f^ __ John remains unmarried, Elizabeth P^. married 
Jno. T. Gunnell, who had one son Thomas Allen 
Gunnell and soon after died. Olive had several 
children, Allen G., Albert, Thomas, John, Miner, 
Susan, Elizabeth, Margaret, Laura, Olivia. 



DEDUCTIONS. 169 

From the foregoing quotations many deduc- c hap. n . 
tions may be made. A few of tliem will be 
mentioned. 

Peter Chastain, John Chastain, and 
Stephen Chastain, whose names are quoted chas- 
from the *' General List of Families of the *^*^°^* 
Parish, '^ were near of kin. They are rec- 
orded in the Vestry Book as Church Wardens 
and vestrymen. The wife of Peter Chastain 
was Anne Sublett, who died in Manakintown, 
April 3, 1723. It was probably a son of his 
who married a daughter of Bartholomew 
Dupu}^ The wife of John Chastain was 
named Marianne. The wife of Stephen 
Chastain, sen., was named Martha, who died 
in Manakintown, Va., December 24, 1725, 
aged about fifty-two or fifty-three years. 

Of the four registered Sublett families, 
Abraham, sen., was the father of the other subietts. 
three. The Vestry Book registers them also 
as vestrymen. It was a descendant of Louis 
Sublett who married a descendant of Bar- 
tholomew Dupuy. 

Anthony Trabue was a church Warden and 
Vestryman in the Parish, as the old Vestry Trabue. 
Book shows, from December, 1707 to Septem- 
ber 30, 1723. His name no where appears 
later than last date. The name of his son, 
Anthony, appears in the official documents 
many years later. 

It was a son of Anthony Trabue who mar- 
ried Olympia Dupuy, granddaughter of 
Bartholomew Dupuy. 

John Levilain in the List of Families was 
the father of John, Jr. Both were vestrymen, Leviiain. 
and are also mentioned as sponsors in the 
Register of Baptisms. It was John, Jr. who 



170 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

C hap. II . married a daughter of Bartholomew Dupuy, 
and John James Dupuy also married his 
sister. 
It appears from the Baptismal Register that 
Francis Francis Dupuy was in close fellowship with 
Dupuy. ^j^g family of Bartholomew Dupuy, and may 
have been near of kin to him; but his is regis- 
tered as a different family, having a wife and 
daughter. The Register shows the following 
issue from him and his wife, Mary: a son, 
bom August 21, 1732, and a daughter, Judith, 
born October 8, 1734 (See Register nos. 15, 
20). His name is recorded in the Vestry 
Book, in the first "List of Tithable persons, ^^ 
in the year 1710, and the last time it appears 
in such lists is in the year 1731. In the year 
1736, ''The Widow Dupuy'' is registered 
among the Tithable persons, and in the Bap- 
tismal Register, August 15th, of the same 
year a black, named Tobie, is recorded to his 
wife. This is pretty conclusive evidence that 
Francis Dupuy died between October 8, 1734, 
and August 15, 1736, for there is no other way 
to account for a "widow Dupuy." The 
author has been unable to find the least trace 
of any of his descendants except his two 
children, and he is under the impression that 
the family was delicate and that there is no 
living progeny; or if any they cannot be 
identified. 

The General List of Families, it will be 

Sons of observed, assigns to Bartholomew Dupuy 

^^Jg^^' three "garcons" and two "filles." This is 

Dupuy. the only authority worthy of serious notice, 

which assigns to the old progenitor three 

sons apparently, Mrs. StovalFs Pictorial 

Tree (1861) gives him three sons only, and 

makes the mistake of naming John Bartholo- 



DEDUCTIONS. 171 

mew as one of them, whom the will of the old c hap. i l 
progenitor proves to have been his grandson, sons of 
thereby confirming the tradition among the^^^g^^' 
descendants of John Bartholomew. Dr. Dupuy. 
Brock and others have followed in the wake 
of Mrs. Stovall, denying to the progenitor any 
daughters at all, until the author some years 
ago affirmed it, and in his letters to friends 
gave their names. It is well known that the 
oldest pictorial trees gave the progenitor only 
two children, Peter and John James and no 
daughters. As this volume will prove con- 
clusively that the General List is correct in 
assigning him two daughters, what about 
the assignment of three "garcons"? Did the 
old progenitor really have three sons, and if 
so what were their names'? Because the List 
is correct in the number of his daughters, it 
does not follow that he had also three sons, for 
the French word "garcon" is of wider signi- 
fication than ''filles," and might include any 
males who made their homes in those families. 
One thing is very certain, if the progenitor 
had three sons, there is not a single Dupuy 
mentioned in any of the official documents of 
King William Parish that can be designated 
as his third son. Every Dupuy in all the 
documents are clearly accounted for, and 
there is not one named, who could possibly 
have been the third son of the old progenitor. 
Mrs. Major, in her clear cut statements, everv 
one of which are proven to be true, names 
only two sons, Peter and John James, and the 
Will of Bartholomew Dupuy confirms her 
statement. The author, therefore, is forced 
to one of three conclusions on the subject, viz: 
1st, That the third "garcon'^ was a male, but 
not a son, living with the family ; 2d, That, if 



172 QUOTATIONS AND DEDUCTIONS. 

C hap. II . a son, lie died, and no mention of his name is 
to be found anywhere; or 3d, That the entry 
is an error. He is thoroughly convinced that 
Bartholomew Dupuy never had but the two 
sons, Peter and John James, to survive him, 
and he seriously doubts if he ever had a third 
one. 
As to the names of the two daughters of the 
Daugh- progenitor, and whom they married, any one 
Banhoi- ^^^ "^vill read carefully the entries of the Bap- 
omew tismal Register, and observe the association 
Dupuy. ^£ names at the baptism of the progenitor's 
grandchildren, and especially the fact that at 
only two of their baptisms, and on no other 
occasions throughout the whole register, do 
Bartholomew Dupuy and his wife appear as 
sponsors, except at the baptism of the first 
child respectively of Stephen Chastain and 
his wife Martha, and of John Levilain and 
his wife Philippa, must infer that those 
women must have been his daughters (See 
entries, Nos. 5, 13). It was in this way, that 
the author years ago arrived at the inference 
that Martha, who married Stephen Chastain, 
and Philippa, who married John Levilain, Jr., 
were the daughters of the old progenitor. 
Some years later, this inference was greatly 
strengthened by the reception of the state- 
ment of Mrs. Susanna Major, but the question 
was only recently put beyond the slightest 
doubt, when the author found the wills of 
Martha Chastain and of the old progenitor. 

It may be safely said therefore, that from 
the deductions made from the documents 
recorded, we are able to start the descendants 
of Bartholomew Dupuy off correctly, even to 
his grandchildren, whose names and dates of 
births in nearly every instance are recorded. 



DEDUCTIONS. 173 

And if those, who attempt to write genealogy, c hap. i i. 
would compile it from official documents and Daugh- 
well authenticated statements, instead ofg^/^^^Qi. 
from mere presumption, genealogies would be omew 
more accurate, and people would have more ^"P"y- 
confidence in them. 

The science of genealogy is founded on 
common-sense and facts, without which a 
genealogy is virtually worthless. 



CHAPTER III. 

GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Ancestry of Bartholomew Dupuy. 

Chap. III. The Pedigree of Bartholomew Dupuy which 

Ancestry follows is claimed by its author to have been 

Barthoi- ^^^^^^ from French authorities. It was com- 

omew piled specially for this work, by Mr. Henry 

Dupuy. Dudley Teetor, M. A., genealogist, of New 

York. 

I. In 1033, the Emperor Conrad conquered, at 
the head of his army, the baronies of Aries and 
Bourgogne in France. 

Raphael DuPuy, in Latin, Podio, "grand Cham- 
bellan de I'empire," followed him. He was one of 
the Governors which that Emperor appointed over 
his new possessions. After which, the descend- 
ants of Raphael Dupuy became possessed of many 
estates in Languedoc and Dauphine. 

The Tomb of Raphael DuPuy was opened in 
1610 by order of M. Le Comte de la Roche, "Gou- 
veneur de Romans en Dauphine." The corpse was 
found extended upon a marble table; his spurs 
upon one side, his sword upon the other, and upon 
his head a helmet of lead containing the following 
inscription upon a copper plate: — "Raphael de 
Podio, General de la Cavalerie Romaine, et Grand 
Chambellan de I'Empire Romaine." 

It is said that the "House of Du Puy en Dau- 
phine" possesses a gold medal granted to this Ra- 
phael Du Puy, upon one side of which is written : — 
"Raphael de Podio, grand chambellan de I'Empire 
Romaine Sons I'Empereur, Auguste, Christ reg- 
nant en chair." Raphael was succeeded by his son : 

II. Hugues DuPuy 1st., Seigneur de Pereins, 
d'Apifer & de Rocheport. He went to the Crusades, 
with three of his children, and his wife Deurard de 
Poisseu, in 1096. He founded the Abbey d'Aigue- 
belle, Order of Saint Bernard, was one of the Gen- 
erals of "Godefroi de Bouillon," and for his bravery 



BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY'S ANCESTRY. 175 

C hap. II I. was panted the "Souverainete la ville d' Acres." 

Ancestry Ancient writers call him Hugues de Podio, "tres 

^^ excellent guerrier." He left four sons: — 1. Alle- 

omew nian, (who follows) ; 2. Rodolphe, to whom Gode- 

Dupuy. froi de Bouillon gave many "lands on the other side 

of the river of Jordan," and who was killed "au 

combat de la vallee de Ran"; 3. Romaine DuPuy, 

who died in the principalities which Godefroi had 

given him; 4. Raymond DuPuy, Second Rector, or 

Grandmaster of the order of St. John de Jerusalem. 

III. Alleman 1st. DuPuy, Chevalier, was a man 
of valour like his brothers, and was in battle on 
many occasions in 1115. He left two isons, Guil- 
laume, who founded the house of DuPuy en Berri, 
and 

IV. Hugues DuPuy, 2nd., Chevalier, Seigneur de 
Pereins, Rochefort, Apifer and Montbruu. He 
went to the Crusades in 1140, with Ame III. Comte 
de Savoye;, and "acquit beau-coup de gloire en 
1147," in the Army of the Emperor Conrad III. He 
espoused Floride Moiran, and left issue. 

V. Alleman DuPuy 2nd., Chevalier, Seigneur de 
Pereins &c. He also bore the name De Montbrun, 
and rendered homage in 1229, to Aimar de Poitiers. 
He married Alix, Princess Dauphine, and left 
issue. 

VI. Alleman Dupuy 3rd., Chevalier and Lord of 
Pereins, Rochefort, Apifer, Montbrun, Rhelianete, 
Baux, Solignac, Bruis, Bordeaux, Ansenix and 
Conissieu. He married Beatrix Artod, and had 
Alleman iv (who follows), 2. Bastat, Archbishop 
of Boulogne, founder of the Brauch DuPuy, Seig- 
neurs de Montbrun; Joubert Cardinal of Boulogne. 

VII. Alleman DuPuy iv.. Chevalier &c, followed 
Phillipe V. into Flanders in 1329. He married 
Eleanore, daughter of Jean Alleman, Seigneur do 
Lancoil, by whom he had — 

VIIT. Alleman DuPuy v., Chevalier de Pereins 
&c. He married Ainarde de Roland who was a 
Widow in 1362 (etoit veuve 1362) by whom he had 
a son — 



176 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEP SKETCHES. 

C hap. II I. IX. Gilles DuPuy, Chevalier, Seigneur de Po 
Ancestryeins &c. He rendered homage to Charles de France 

Barthoi- ^^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^^- ^^ married Alix de Belle- 
omew" combe, and had issue — 1. Gilles, 2. Artoit, 3. Ai- 

Dupuy. nier, 4. Guillaume, 5. Alleman, 6. Francois, Chev- 
alier of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem. He 
was succeeded by his son — 

X. Gilles DuPuy 2nd., Chevalier, Seigneur de 
Pereins and autres villes, died 1420; married lst.,> 
Florence de Hauteville; 2nd, Beatrix de Taulig- 
nan. He left issue, Ainier, 2. Deider, 3. Claude, 
4. Jean, 5. Ainier, Chevalier de Tordre de St. Jean 
de Jerusalem, (who follows) 6. Marie, who es- 
poused Antoine de Montbrun. 

XI. Ainier DuPuy, General des Armees A. D. 
1446, Chevalier &c, married Catharine de Belle- 
combe and by her had — 

XII. Jacques (James) DuPuy, Chevalier de 
Rochefort &c. He married 1476, 1st., Francois 
Artaud; 2nd., Jeanne, daughter of the Governor of 
Vese. He died 1505 and left sons, 1. Jean, (who 
follows), 2. Jacques, 3. Honorat, 4. Guillaume. 

XIII. Jean DuPuy, founder of the Protestant 
family of Cabrielles, upper Languedoc, died 1583, 
leaving two sons, Pierre (who follows) and Ray- 
mond, the younger married Antoinette Bourasier, 
Dame de Periens who gave him two sons Jean and 
Charles. 

XIV. Pierre, elder brother of Raymond, was the 
father of — 

XV. Bartholomy DuPuy, Lord of Cabrielles, 
1581, who was the father of — 

XVI. Jean, or John DuPuy who married, 1652, 
Anne St. Heyer and had — 

/ XVII. Bartholomew DuPuy, the Huguenot Ref- 
ugee to Virginia (p. 178). 

Professional Statement. 

Certifi- ^ hereby certify that the foregoing Pedigree, 
cate showing the lineal descent of Bartholomew DuPuy, 



BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY'S ANCESTRY. 177 

C hap. II I. Huguenot Refugee, to Virginia, from Raphael Du- 
Puy of France, A. D., 1030, is the result of several 
years foreign and domestic research, and that I ho- 
lieve the same to be historically correct. 

Henry Dudley Teetor. 
New York, Jan. 20th, 1906. 

The Importance oi Family Records. 

Many do not jealously guard family 

Family records. All ought to do it, for they are 

S^^^^A^F^ important not only in determirdng blood- 

Shouldbe ,^ . . t - p -i x i • -i 

Kept, relationship, family property, class privileges 
and national history, but also the origin of 
one who may become famous. We at once 
want to know who such an one is; what are 
his belongings; who are his ancestors. 
While compiling this genealogy, the author 
was applied to for the pedigree of a young 
descendant, who had been elected to a pro- 
fessorship in a State University, and it was 
furnished. The idea is true, no man is a dis- 
tinct and separate individual. We are all 
products. We all belong to the past. Those 
who have been live over again in their 
children. Hence, in a man^s biography, his 
ancestors are alwavs recorded. The author 
also received letters from some families, who 
are probably lineal descendants of Bartholo- 
mew Dupuy, but, having lost their pedigree, 
they could not be connected with him. So 
every one should endeavor to preserve a com- 
plete and accurate pedigree, which will be use- 
ful, and some day may become eloquent in 
lessons to his posterity. 

The author has strenuoush^ aimed at accu- 
racy and completeness in compiling the 
genealogy, but has been too dependent on 



178 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

C hap, ii i.precarious sources to attest for it, as a whole, 
more tlian reasonable correctness. 

The sources have been ancestrial trees, 
printed genealogies, which have been partly 
corrected, and mainly family registers fur- 
nished by living descendants. Had all the 
descendants responded, to whom the author 
wrote, the result would have been more com- 
plete and satisfactory. More than a quarter 
of a century has been spent in gathering all 
the data. The descendants from Martha 
Dupuy are quoted mostly and rearranged from 
the ^'Virginia Historical Collection, vol. v., 
New Series. '' 

Starting with a name in the Index, the line- 
age may be traced, by following the head lines 
and reference pages, and by observing that 
from a certain ancestor, the children of suc- 
cessive families are enumerated by different 
numbers; thus, I, i, (i), 1, (1); while each 
generation is marked with a superior number 
from the old progenitor. 

A great diversity of spelling proper names 
will be observed. 

Bartholomew Dupuy and His Children. 

Bartholomew Dupuy (p. 176) was born in 
Dupuy. France about 1652; died between March 7th and 
May 17th of the year 1743; married in France, 
1685, the Countess Susanna Lavillon ; died between 
Oct. 27, 1731 and March 13, 1737. They escaped 
from France in December, 1685, to Germany; in 
1699 they went to England; in 1700 they emi- 
grated to America, and settled on the south side of 
James river, about 18 miles above Richmond, in 
King William Parish, Henrico (now Powhatan) 
County, Va., where they died. Issue* : 

*Where dates of births are not recorded the order of issue is 
from inference. ' 



BARTHOLOMEW DUPUY'S CHILDREN. 179 

C hap. II I. 1. Peter^Dnpiij; Listed in the first "List of Tith- 
Dupuy. able Persons" in the Parish, 1710, wlien he cer- 
tainly was aged 16 yearst., m. about 1722, Judith 
Lefevre; d. between Sept. 28, 1736, and May 17, 
1743 Below 

II. Martha^Dupuy; d., between April 23, and 
May 20, of the year 1740 ; m. about 1726, in King 
William Parish, Stephen Chastain, d. prior to his 
wife in King William Parish, Goochland Co., 
Va Page 249 

III. John James^Duptuy; For many years a 
church warden and vestryman of the Parish; His 
estate at death included 2380 acres of land and not 
less than 35 negroes; b. probably in 1698, as he was 
first listed in 1714; d., between Feb. 9th and 27th 
of 1775 in Cumberland Co., Va.,; m. about 1728, 
Susanna Levilain, who was living at her husband's 
death; (Probably a daughter of John Levilain, 
Sen.) Page 259 

IV. Philippa^Dupuy; d. probably, about 1738, as 
her name no where appears after the birth of her 
last child, in Nov. 1737; m., about 1730, John 
Levilain, Jr.; (A vestryman of the Parish, and 
probably a son of John Levilain, Sen., and hence 
own brother to the wife of John James Dupuy. ) . . 
Page 360 

Line of Peter^ Dupuy, 

Peter^ Dupuy, m. Judith Lefevre, (above). Issue \ 

I. John Bartholomew-Dupuy, Legatee in the old 
Progenitor's will ; b. in King William Parish, Va., 
Jan. 1723, (Register, No. 3.) ; m. Esther Guerrant, 
b., Dec. 2, 1735 (Register, No. 22); (Daughter of 
Peter and Magdalene Guerrant, who was probably 
son of the immigrant, Daniel Guerrant) . .Page 180 

II. James-Dnpuy, m. Prudence Wills. They 
lived in Nottoway Co., Va. Issue: 

i. Lawrence^, ii. James^, m. Martha Mann. 
Moved to INIississippi Page 182 

■j-They were listed for taxation at 16 years of age. 



180 GENEALOGY WITH BKIEP SKETCHES. 

Peter^Dupuy, m. Judith Lefevre, (p. 179). Issue — 

Continued : 

C hap. II I. iii. Edmond^, m. Miss Glasscock, iv. Nancy^, m. 
Dupuy. Col. John Malone^Dupuy (p. 183). 

V. Eliza^, m. Wrig*!!!.. They moved to 

the Southwest. 

III. Eliza^Dupuy, m. 1st, Hundley. Issue: 

Hundley. i- Quintus C^, m. 1st — West; in. 2d. — Tuck, 
ii. Elizabeth^, m. John E. Trabue. Eliza^, m. 
2d. Thomas Atkinson. Issue: 
Atkinson. iii- Frances^ 

Dupuy. IV. Peter^Dupuy, b., in King William Parish, 
Va. Feb. 12, 1729," (Register No. 7) ; m. Elizabeth 

Malone Page 182 

V. Mary^Dupuy, b., in King William Parish, 

Va., Feb. 20, 173i(B. R. No. 12) ; m., Jackson. 

Jackson. Issue : i. James^. ii. Magdalene^, iii. JoeP. iv. Lu- 

cretia^. 
Dupuy. VI. Isaac^Dupuy, b., in King William Parish,, 
Va., Feb. 7, 1733, (Register, No. 14). 

VII. Judith^Dupuy, b., in King William Parish, 
Va., June 24, 1734 (Register, No. 20). 

VIII. Mary Magdalene^Dupuy, b., in King Wil- 
liam Parish, Va., Sept. 28, 1736, (Register, No. 24) ; 

Jackson. m. Jackson. Issue: i. Olly^. ii. Esther'', iii. 

Patience^, iv. Edward^, v. Jordan^. 

John Bartholomciv^ Dupuy, m. Esther Guerranty 

(p. 179). Issue: 

Dupuy. I. Magdalene^Dupuy, m., Thomas Watkins, of 

Halifax Co., Va '. Page 183 

II. John^Dupuy; Captain of Infantry, in the 
same regiment with his two younger brothers, dur- 
ing the revolution; among his descendants is pre- 
served, as an heirloom, a Spontoon, a military 
weapon borne by officers of the infantry; He lived 
in the Southwestern portion of Prince Edward Co., 
Va., near the old Welsh Track Meeting House, now 
Bethlehem Presbyterian Church; His homestead 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 181 

John Bartliolomeic'^Dupuy , m. Esther Guerrant, 
(p. 179). Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. fell int'o the hands of his grandson, Joel W. Daniel, 
Dupuy. who exchanged it for the farm of his half brother, 
Robert P. Daniel, in Charlotte Co., Va., whose heirs 
now reside on it; He and his wife are buried near 
the site of his residence (burned), in the family 
grave-jard, which was reserved in his will (pro- 
bated Oct. 15, 1832), as a burying-ground of his 
descendants ; b., Feb. 20, 1756 ; d. Oct. 1, 1832 ; m. 
Mary (Polly) W. Watkins, b. Oct. 30, 1766; d. Aug. 
4, 1840; [Daughter of Col. Joel and Agnes (Mor- 
ton) Watkins (Welsh Descent), of "Woodfork," 
Charlotte Co., Va; Son of Thomas Watkins, of 
Chickahomeny; Son of Thomas Watkins, of "Swift 
Creek," Cumbeirland Co., Va., (now Powhatan), 
whose will bears date, 1760 ; The following tribute 
Avas written of her father by Mr. John Randolph, 
of Roanoke : — "On Sunday, the second of January, 
departed this life Col. Joel Watkins, beloved, hon- 
ored, and lamented by all who knew him. Without 
shining abilities or the advantages of an education, 
by plain, straightforward industry, under the guid- 
ance of old fashioned honesty and practical good 
sense, he accumulated an ample fortune, in which 
it is firmly believed there was not one dirty shil- 
ling"] ..'. Page 184 

III. James^Dupuy; Captain in Infantry in the 
revolution; Heir of the famous old sword, which he 
bequeathed to his grandson; Very prominent citi- 
zen of Nottoway Co., Va., which he represented in 
the State Legislature for twenty consecutive years ; 
b. Mav 5, 1758; d. June 30, 1823; m. 1782, Mary 
Purnell, b. INlar. 13, 1763; d. Feb. 15, 1828; (Daugh- 
ter of William Purnell) Page 188 

IV. Peter^Dupuy; Lieutenant of Infantry in the 
revolution; m. Nov. 14, 1789, Margaret Martin, b. 
1768; d. about 1852; They moved from Nottoway 
county to Powhatan county, Va., in 1797, and 
thence, in 1818, to Richmond, Va. ; The family oc- 



182 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

John Ba7'tholo7new^Dupuy, m. Esther Guerrant, 
(p. 179). Issue — Continued : 

Ch ap. Il l, cppied their residence on Church Hill, Richmond, 
Dupuy. in 1836, and it was broken up in 1853 Page 190 

James^Dupuy, m. Martha Man, (p. 179). Issue: 

I. Mary^Dupuy, m. Magee. 

II. Matilda^Dupuy, m. Stamps. 

III. Johnathan Ethelbert^Dupuy, M. D., b. about 
1800; d., 1880; m., 1840, Tabitha Evans. Issue: 

i. Martha Belle Vedora^ m. 1871, Edward Wil- 
kerson. 

ii. James Alva^, b., 1840; m., 1861, Cynthia 
Mellard, b., 1847. Issue: 
(i) Laura Adella^ b., 1864; m. 1883, John 
Russell Josey. Issue: . 
josey. 1. Rena Alberta^, b. Mar. 14, 1884. 2. Blanch 

Adella^ b., 1886. 3. John Dupuy^ b., 1888. 
4. Mattie Lee^ b., 1890. 
Dupuy. (ii) James Ethelbert^ b., 1868; m., 1902, Moil- 

lie Olivia Vernon, b., 1878. 
(iii) Robert Leroy% b., 1870; m., 1899, Bertie 
Daugherty, b., 1879. Issue: 
1. Daisy Lee^ b., 1900. 

(iv) Lorena Belle^ b., 1873; m., 1900, Amy 
Young, b., 1873. 

(v) Joseph Lawrence^, b., 1876; m., 1895, 
Georgie Edwin Applewhite, b., 1876. Issue: 

1. Jettie Gladys', b., 1897. 2. Laura Josey'^, 
b., 1899. 

(vi) Alva C.«, b., 1879. (vii) Hallie Daisy«, 
b., 1881; d. Dec. 28, 1898. (viii) Howard Eu- 
gene^ b., 1883. (ix) Minnie Tabitha^ b., 1886. 
(x)Lelia Katherine*^, b., 1890. 

Peter^Diipuy, m. Elizaheth Malone, (p. 180). Issue : 

I. William^Dupuy; Captain in the revolution; 
Moved from Pittsylvania Co., Va., where his par- 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 183 

Peter^Dupuy, m. Elizabeth Malone, (p. 180). Issue 

— Continued : 

C hap. Ill , ents settled, to what is now known as Wheelers- 
Dupuy. burgh, O., on land then called "The French Grant" ; 

d. in SpringTille, Ky. ; m. 1st Fuqua. Page, 192 

m. 2d., Peggy Littlejohn Page, 193 

II. Eobert^Dupuy. III. Stephen^Dupuy. 
^ IV. Col. John Malone^Dupuy, m. 1st., Nancy* 
Dupuy, (p. 180), and moved to Alabama where she 
died without issue; m.2d. Elizabeth Hall. Page, 193 

Y. Jesse^Dupuy; Lived in Norfolk, Va., and en- 
gaged in shipping ; failed in business on account of 
a storm at sea; Moved to Portsmouth, O., and 
thence to Augusta, Ky., where he died; m. M. A. 
Thompson Page, 194 

Magdalene^ Dupuy, m. Thomas Watkins, (p. 180). 

Issue : 

Watkins. I. Benjamin'^ Watkins, b. Sept. 1, 1777; d. Oct. 
28, 1864; m. Feb. 7, 1805, Susan-^Dupuy (p. 184) 
of Prince Edward county, Va. They lived in Pittsyl- 
vania county, Va P^S'e, 194 

II. Mary^Watkins, m. Clay. They settled 

in Tennessee 

III. John^Watkins, b. Mar. 4, 1782; d. Feb. 8, 
1858; m. Nancy Wilson, b. Mar. 4, 1785; d. Sept. 
26, 1854 Page, 202 

IV. Thomas^Watkins, m. Leatitia Hairston. 
(The Hairstons are of Scotch extract and de- 
scended from Peter Hairston who settled in Mary- 
land). 

V. Stephen Dupuy^Watkins, b. Jan. 27, 1788 ; d. 
July 13, 1862; m. Nov. 21, 1816, Sarah Holman* 
Dupuy (p. 191) .Page, 204 

VI. Joel^Watkins, m. . Settled in Tennes- 
see. Issue : 

i. Stephen'^, who was a merchant in Nashville, 
Tenn., many years ago. 



184 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Magdalene^Dupuy , m. Thomas Watkins, (p. 180). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . VII. Ptolomy Lefevre^Watkins, b. May 18, 1793 ; 

Watkins. d. Apr. 5, 1857 ; m. Apr. 21, 1825, Harriet Amasia* 

Dupuy (p. 192) Page, 205 

Capt. Joh7i^Dupuy, m. Mary W. Watkins, (p. 181). 

Issue: 

Dupuy. I. Watkins^Dupuy ; Commissioner of the Rev- 
enue in Prince Edward County, Va., for about 
twenty-five years, and though opposed at every elec- 
tion by clever candidates, he was not defeated for 
the office, until old age incapacitated him for it; 
Elder, about 40 years, in the Bethlehem Presbyte- 
rian church, successor to the "Welsh Track Meet- 
ing House" ; b. Sept. 17, 1784 ; d., in Prince Edward 
County, Va., Oct. 9, 1873; m. Elizabeth S. Walton, 
b. Feb. 18, 1795 ; d. Feb. 26, 1864. Both are buried 
in the family graveyard of his father, on the estate 
of Robt. P. Daniel. Issue: 
i. Henry^, died in infancy, 
ii. John Bartholomew^, b. in Prince Edward 
county, Va., June 18, 1812; d. June 13, 1890, 
near Rolling Hill, Charlotte county, Va., while 
on a visit to his wife's niece, Mrs. H. L. Berke- 
ley ; m. Dec. 22, 1841, Henrietta Louisa Hunter, 
of Appomattox county, Va., b. Sept. 11, 1820; d. 
in Roanoke, Va., May 5, 1900; [Daughter of 
Major Benjamin and Miss (May) Hunter] 
They lived in Prince Edward County, Va., near 
Bethlehem church, where their children were 
reared; Late in life, when their children became 
scattered, they resided with their youngest 
daughter, in Roanoke, Va., where they are 
buried Page, 206 

II. Susan^Dupuy, b. Jan. 6, 1786 ; d., in Pittsyl- 
vania County, Va., Apr. 20, 1864; m. Benjamin* 
Watkins, (p. 183) Page, 194 

III. Henry Guerrant^ Dupuy, b. Apr. 12, 1788; 
d. Mar. 23, 1815; m. Dec. 7, 1809, Sarah Taylor; 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 185 

Capt. Jolin^Dupuy, m. Mary W. Watkins, (p. 181). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. I ll, d. Nov. 19, 1849. They lived near Walker's church, 
Dupuy. Prince Edward county, Va Page, 212 

IV. Jane^Dupuy, b. Dec. 9, 1790; d. Nov. 2, 1870; 
m. Nicholas Edmunds, of Brunswick County, Va. ; 
[Nicholas Edmonds, Henry Edmonds, and Thomas 
Edmonds, probably of the same lineage, were ves- 
trymen of the Episcopal church of St. Andrew's 
Parish, Brunswick county, Va., at different periods 
between the years 1732-86. Doubtless Mr. Nicholas 
Edmunds, born in the same county, (though the 
name is now spelled differently), was of the same 
lineage, for he retained those names among his 
children]. They lived in Charlotte County, Va., 
near the Bethlehem church Page, 215 

V. Mary^Dupuy, b. Oct. 20, 1792; d. Feb. 12, 
1861 ; m. Col. William Townes Walker, b., 1756 ; d, 
1833. They lived near Darlington Heights, Prince 
Edward Co., Va Page, 218 

VI. Frances Anderson^Dupuy, b. Dec. 8, 1794; 
d. Apr. 20, 1831; m. John Daniel, (his 2d. wife), of 
Charlotte County, Va Page, 221 

VII. William Hunt^Dupuy, b. Mar. 11, 1796; d. 
Aug. 19, 1853; m. Agnes Payne Ware, b. Jan. 5, 
1798; d. Aug. 2, 1852. They moved to Kentucky 
and settled in Christian county, in 1847. .Page, 222 

VIII. John^Dupuy, b. Dec. 17, 1798 ; d. Apr. 12, 
1873; m, Ann Beverly Daniel, of North Carolina. 
They lived in Cumberland County, near Farmville, 
Va ; Long a merchant in Farmville, of the firm "Mc- 
Kinney and Dupuy" Page, 224 

IX. Joel Watkins^Dupuy, M. D.; Philadelphia 
College of Physicians and Surgeons; Practised 
Medicine about Darlington Heights, Prince Ed- 
ward County, Va., and in adjoining counties, and 
was esteemed a fine physician; b., at "Woodfork," 
Charlotte county, Va., the home of his maternal 
grandparents, Nov. 6, 1800 ; d. June 23, 1854, at the 
home of his brother-in-law, James Henry'Dupuy, 



/ 



186 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Capt. John^Dupuy, m. Mary W. Watkins, (p. 181). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. Il l, in Tennessee, while on a prospecting tour of lands 
Dupuy. in Arkansas; m., Feb., 1833, Paulina Pocahontas 
Eldridge, of Brunswick County, Va., b. July 18, 
1808 ; d. June 30, 1890, in Harrisonburg, Va., at the 
home of her son-in-law, Rev. Lewis B. Johnston; 
[She was a gt.-gt.-gt.-gt.-grand-daughter of the 
wonderful and famous "Pocahontas". The line of 
descent is as follows : — John Rolfe, a twin, educated 
at an English University, and a man of reputation, 
(Son of John and Dorothea (Mason) Rolfe, b. Oct. 
17, 1562 ; m. Sept. 24, 1582, who had other children 
— Eustace (twin), Edward, and Henry, who was a 
merchant in London and a member of the Virginia 
Company; Son of Eustace and Joanna (Jener) 
Rolfe, m. May 27, 1560, descendant of a family, resi- 
dent for centuries in the county of Norfolk, Eng- 
land), married in England, and sailed for Virginia 
in May, 1609. The ship in which he came over was 
wrecked on the Bermudas, and there a daughter 
was born named Bermuda. They reached Virginia 
in May, 1610, and Rolfe's wife had either died at 
the Bermudas or only lived a short while after 
reaching Virginia. About Apr. 1, 1614, he married 
secondly, in the old Burton church, Williamsburg, 
Va., a few miles from Jamestown, the princess, 
Pocahontas, born in 1595, daughter of Powhatan, 
the noblest and most powerful of the Indian Chiefs 
of North America; She had been lured aboard an 
English vessel, in April, 1612, and held as hostage 
for the return of several white persons and some 
stolen property, and had been baptized in the Pro- 
testant faith, April, 1613, in the Jamestown church, 
by the name of Rebecca, but her original name was 
Matoax, which the Indians carefully concealed from 
the English, and changed to Pocahontas, out of 
superstitious fear, lest the knowledge of her true 
name might bring her hurt. In 1616, Rolfe and 
Pocahontas went to England where their only child, 



LINE OP PETER'DUPUY. 187 

Capt. JohnWwpuy, m. Mary W. Watkins, (p. ISl). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap, m . Thomas, was born the same year. As they were 
Dupuy. about to set sail for their return to Virginia, Poca- 
hontas died and was buried in the chancel of St. 
Mary's church, Gravesend, Mar. 21, 1617. Rolfe 
left his infant son at Plymouth under the care of 
Sir Lewis Stukeley, but afterwards he was trans- 
ferred to his uncle, Henry Rolfe, of London, with 
whom he remained until manhood. John Rolfe 
married thirdly, about 1620, Jane, daughter of 
Capt. William Pierce, of Virginia, and had a daugh- 
ter, Elizabeth, born 1620. At different times he 
was Secretary and Recorder General of the Colony 
and a member of the council, and is spoken of by 
all the early writers who mention him as an honest 
- and worthy gentleman. He died in March 1622. 
His son, Thomas, after reaching manhood, under 
his uncle Henry in London, came to Virginia ; was 
permitted by the governor in 1641 to visit his 
Indian relatives, his aunt Cleopatre and Kinsman, 
Opechancanough ; was a lieutenant in 1646 ; and be- 
tween 1646-63 patented a number of tracts of land, 
and became a man of wealth. He married Miss 
Poytress (doubtless a daughter of Francis Poy- 
tress), and through him are the descendants of 
Pocahontas. Their only cliild, Jane Rolfe, married 
Col. Robert Boiling, of Kippax, Prince George; 
Their only child, Major John Boiling, married Miss 
Kennon ; They liad one son and five daughters ; the 
son. Col. John Boiling, married Miss Blair, and the 
daughters married respectively, Richard Randolph, 
Col. Fleming, Dr. William Gay, James Murray, 
and Thomas Eldridge, who was the father of 
Thonms, who was the father of Dr. Dupuy's wife] 
Page, 225 

X. Agnes^Dupuy, b. May 27, 1802; d. Feb. 12, 
1812. 

XI. Elizabeth G.^^Dupuy, b. Feb. 12, 1804; d. 



188 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Capt. John^Du'puy, m. Mary W. Watkins, (p. 181). 

Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. Feb. 8, 1852; m. James Henry^Dupuy (p. 189). 
Dupuy. They moved to Tennessee Page 236 

XII. James Lefevre^ Dupuy ; For many years an 
elder in the Presbyterian church ; b. Sept. 22, 1807 ; 

d. at the home of his neice, Mrs. E. L. Wilson, 

Gerardstown, W. Va. ; m. Amanda B. Butler. Set- 
tled in Amherst county, Va., and after losing all 
his family, lived among his relatives. Issue: 

i. Reuben Ruffin^, d., 1872, in early manhood. 

XIII. Joseph Thomas^Dupuy, b. Feb. 24, 1812; 
d. May 1, 1831. 

Capt. Jamcs^Dupuy, m. Mary Purnell, (p. 181). 

Issue : 

I. Ann Lefevre^Dupuy, b. Mar. 9, 1784; m. 1st. 
Dabney Morris; m. 2d., M. E. Jeffress; m. 3d., T. 
Wootten. No issue. 

II. Mary Purnell^Dupuy, b. Feb. 7, 1786 ; m. 1st., 
Robert Dickinson, b. Nov. 25, 1767; d. Dec. 25, 
1818; m. 2d. T. Jeter. Issue by 1st mar- 
riage Page, 228 

III. Asa^Dupuy; Presiding justice of Prince Ed- 
ward County, Va. ; b. Jan. 7, 1788 ; d. Jan. 2, 1848 ; 
m. Jan. 12, 1837, Emily Howe, of Princeton, Mass., 
b. Jan. 28, 1811 ; d. Dec. 26, 1883. Lived in the vi- 
cinity of "Marble Hill," Prince Edward Co., 
Va Page, 231 

IV. William Jones^Dupuy, M. D.; Philadelphia 
College of Physicians and Surgeons ; b. May 17, 
1792; d. Dec. 13, 1853; m. Jan. 30, 1817, Jane S. 
Ruffin, b. July 26, 1800; d. Dec. 9, 1870; [Sister of 
Edwin Ruffin, the distinguished agriculturist and 
the second child of George Ruffin, of William Co., 
Va., b. 1765, who was the son of Edmund Ruffin, of 
Va., m, LftOy Jane Skipwith, daughter of Sir Wil- 
liam Skipwith of Prestwould Mecklenburg Co., 
Va., sixth baronet, d. 1764, m. Elizabeth Smith ; Sir 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 189 

Capt. James^Dupuy, m. Mary Purnell, (p. 181). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. m. William Skip with descended from John De Mow- 
D^y bray, fourth Baron Mowbray, Lord of the Isle of 
* Axholme, d. 1368. He married Lady Elizabeth Se- 
l grave, only child of John, third Lord Segrave, and 

' of Lady Margaret Plantagenit, Duchess of Nor- 

folk, his wife, who died, 1399 ; daughter of Thomas 
de Brotherton, Earl of Norfolk, Earl 0i Marshal of 
England, (who married Lady Alice; daughter of 
Sir Roger Halys, of Harwich) ; Son of Edward I., 
King of England, and his second wife, Margaret, 
daughter of Philip III., King of France.] They 

lived in Nottoway County, Va Page 232 

V. Elizabeth Guerrant^Dupuy, b. Jan. 17, 1795; 
m. B. Oshorne. Issue: 
Osborne. i. Catherine^, m. Joel Johns, of Lunenburg 

County, Va. Issue: 
Johns. (i) Catherine*^, m. William Davidson, (ii) 

JoeP. (iii) Francis Osborne^ (iv) Mary 
Bruce^, m. Prof. Ashley Hurt, of Tulane Uni- 
versity, New Orleans, 'La. (v) Taylor^, (vi) 
Emma% m. Prof. A. L. Kusian, of Hollin's In- 
stitute, Va. (vii) Charles^(viii) William Creath^ 
Dupuy. VI. John Purnell^Dupuy, b. Feb. 22, 1796; d. 
Dec. 27, 1851. Lived near Burkeville, Va. Never 
married. 

VII. Joseph^Dupuv ; Colonel in the Militia be- 
fore the Civil War ; b. Dec. 12, 1797 ; d. Jan. 18, 
1867; m. 1st., May 15, 1834, Mary Dupuy^Ednmnds 

. (p. 215), d. Aug. 27, 1839; no issue; m. 2d. Dec. 21, 
1842, Sarah WatkinsnValker (p. 218), d. Aug. 8, 
1864 ; Lived in the vicinity of "Marble Hill," Prince 
Edward countv, Va Page, 235 

VIII. James Henrv^Dupuy, b. July 19, 1801 ; d. 
Apr. 4, 1855; m. Elizabeth G.^Dupuy (p. 188). 
Lived at "Marble Hill," Prince Edward county, Va ; 
Moved to West Tennessee, and thence to Southeast 
Missouri Page, 236 



190 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Gapt. James^Dwpuy, m. Mary Purnell, (p. 181). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . IX. Elizabeth Catherine^Dupuy, b. Aug. 30, 

Dupuy. 1803; d. young. 

X. Elvira^Dupuy, b. Oct. 27, 1805; d. Sept. 1, 
1878; m., May 29, 1827, Col. Richard Beverly Eg- 
gleston, of Amelia County, Va., b. Feb. 27, 1797 ; d. 
Aug. 12, 1853; (Son of Edmond Eggleston, of 
Cumberland county, Va. ; The Egglestons are of 
Irish descent, but came over to this country from 
England, and settled on the Eastern Shore of Vir- 
ginia. About 1758-59, two brothers, William and 
Joseph, moved and settled near the center of Ame- 
lia County, Va., where they became associated with 
the Bookers, Tabbs, Archers, Royalls, and Meades, 
in the old "Grubhill church," which was built of 
timber from the lands of those two Egglestons. Col. 
Richard Beverly probably descended from one of 
those brothers. In 1790, Richard and Joseph Eg- 
gleston were elected two of the vestrymen of Grub- 
hill church, and the former was made a war- 
den) Pagie, 239 

Lieut. Petef^Dupuy, m Margaret Martin (p. 181). 

Issue : 

I. Martha Branch^Dupuy, b. Oct., 1790 ; d. June 
25, 1819 ; m. Nov. 14, 1810, William McKinney, b. 
Sept. 6, 1781; d. 1832 Page, 243 

II. Anthony Martin^Dupuy ; Obtained license to 
practise law about the year 1820, settled in Mar- 
tinsville, Henry County, Va., and practised in the 
counties of Patrick, Henry and Franklin until No- 
vember county court of Henry, 1825, when, upon 
the death of the clerk of Henry county, he was ap- 
pointed by Judge Fleming Saunders of the circuit 
court, his successor. He held the office of clerk of 
Henry county by several appointments for twenty- 
seven years, until Oct. 1852, when by the amended 
constitution, the officer was elected by the people. 



LINE OP PETER^DUPUY. 191 

Lieut. Peter^Dupuy, m. Margaret Martin (p. 181). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. At that election, though ardently supported by a 
Dupuy. very large proportion of the wealth and intelligence 
of the county, he was defeated, under the influence 
of the plea that the offices of Virginia, since the 
foundation of the government, had been in the 
hands of the gentlemen of the "old regime," Who 
had reaped the emoluments of office, and it was 
time for others to share therein. The ability, zeal, 
and fidelity, with which he discharged the duties of 
the office, during his long incumbency, were never 
called in question. He possessed social qualities of 
the very highest type, and was fond of the society 
of his friends, by whom he was held in the very 
highest esteem; b., in Nottoway Co., Va., Dec. 21, 
1791 ; d., in IMartinsville, Va., of cancer of the stom- 
ach, Dec. 19, 1869. Never married. 

III. Thomas-'Dupuy, b. Apr. 24, 1793 ; d. July 4, 
1795. 

IV. Sarah^Dupuy, b. Apr. 15, 1795; d. Sept. 11, 
1795. 

V. Louisa Margaret^Dupuy, b. Aug. 14, 1796; d. 
July 26, 1873. Never married. 

VI. Linnaeus^Dupuv, b. Apr. 28, 1798; d. Aug. 
22, 1848; m. Apr. 28, 1831, Celine Cugneau Tate, b. 
Apr. 23, 1798 ; d. Nov. 10, 1851. Issue : 

i. Charles Lewis Cooper'^ ; Member of the Wash- 
ington Artillery, C. S. A., from New Orleans, 
La; Promoted to Colonel; Cashier of Bank in 
New Orleans, after the war; b. Feb. 8, 1832; d., 
in New Orleans, La., June 25, 1895 ; m. Oct. 20, 
1869, Anna Wood^ Dupuy (p. 235), b. May 16, 
1839. Issue : 
(i) Louisa Abbott°, b. Oct. 27, 1872. (ii) Mar- 
gurite Eloise% b. Aug. 21, 1876; d. July 18, 
1877. 

VII. Sarah Holman^Dupuy, b. Jan. 26, 1800; d. 
Aug. 14, 1864; m. Stephen Dupuy'Watkins (p. 
183) Page, 204 



192 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Lieut. Peter^Dupuy, m. Margaret Martin (p. 181). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. VIII. Jane Guerrant^Dupuy, b. Sept. *L2, 1801 ; 

Dupuy. d. Oct. 13, 1853 ; m. July 4, 1826, Thomas McKin- 

ney, b. Mar. 12, 1794; d. Sept. 20, 1867. .Page, 244 

ix. Newton^Dupuy, b. Nov. 18, 1803 ; d. Feb. 21, 
1837. Never married. 

X. James Barrett^Dupuy ; an honored merchant 
in Richmond, Va., for 32 yrs; Long of the firm of 
"Dupuy and McKinney"; Grand Secretary of the 
Grand Lodge of A. F. and A. Masons of Virginia; 
b. May 31, 1805; d. Mar. 29, 1878. Never married. 



XL Mary E^ Dupuy 
XIL Harriet A*. 
Dupuy 



b. June 
8, 1807 



d. Aug. 4, 1817. 
d. April 9, 1872; 



m. Ptolomy Lefevre^Watkins (p. 184) . . .Page, 205 

XIII. Virginia Ann^Dupuy, b. Feb. 15, 1809 ; d. 
Feb. 9, 1834; m. June 10, 1830, William Watson 
Mitchie, of Hanover county, Va., b. Feb. 15, 1809; 
d. Feb. 9, 1834 Page, 244 

XIV. Amelia Elizabeth^Dupuy, b. June 10, 1811 ; 
d. Nov. 1885, at the home of her sister, Mrs. Camp- 
bell, of Lexington, N. C. ; m. Jan. 26, 1846, John 
Hamilton Patterson, b. July 4, 1800; d. Nov. 12, 
1873. No issue. 

XV. Adelaide Lawrence^Dupuy, b. Aug. 5, 1814 ; 
d., in Lexington, N. C. ; m. June 13, 1854, Rev. 
Thomas Sale Campbell (Methodist), b. Aug. 5, 
1814. 

Capt. William^ Dupuy, m. 1st Fuqua, (p. 182). 

Issue : 

I. Moses Fuqua^Dupuy; Sheriff of Greenup 
county, Ky., during the civil war; b. July 26, 1799; 
d. Aug. 13, 1889 ; m. Oct. 4, 1818, Phoebe Stephen- 
son, b. Mav 24, 1795 ; d. Dec. 4, 1854 Page, 245 

- II. Albert^Dupuy. III. William^Dupuv. IV. 
Peter^Dupuy. V. Judith^Dupuy. VI. Elizabeth* 
Dupuy. VII. Evaline'*Dupuy. 



Sf _ k. 



Sti 



i\J W w W A J../-- w(J-«rfk/i 4. i - 



_,...■ i. 



*.' 



Wash., D, C. 

April 10th, •22. 

Dear lir. Ashley, 

I bee tfii.t you will oorroct an error 
in the book "J>uruy « The Hu^^uenot ^artholoasvy 
and his descendents'* 3;^,^ Bev. B. H. i>upuy. 
0371-0945 - 1906, On p.'.iGe 19S is Col. John 
l^lone i>uijuy and his children* I'lie VII IJusan 
ivupuy bl838s '-!• 1900 m. Jarnes Iia-V7kins ( ip^ t^ 
llankins.) Please correot the sane in the 
index. 

I'hanking yoii in advance for your 
kinonoss and trouble I am, 

Gratef i^Iiy yours, 
Harriett Hawkins Chanibers 



Observatory Apt. 



LINE OP PETER'DUPUY. 193 

Capt. William^Dupuy, in. 2d. Mrs. Peggy Little- 
John (p. 182). Issue — Continued: 

Chap III. ^11- Jesse L.^Dupuy, m. Ann Stuart. Issue: 

D^. i- Margaret^ ; d. . 

ii. Lewis C", m, Jennie Partlow. Issue: 

(1) Bertha^ (ii) Walter^ (iii) Altha«. (iv) 

Jessie^. 
iii. John M.^, m. Annie Blair. Issue : 

(i) Louisa A^, b. Feb. 18, 1867; m. George P. 

Reeg. Issue: 1. Arthur^. 

(ii) John Wesley% b. Mar. 13, 1869; m. Mary 

Conrov. Issue: 1. Henrietta^. 

(iii) Thomas J.% b. Dec. 14, 1872; m. Sarah 

Hicks. Issue : 
1. Paul Hicks^. 2. Charlotte A^. 

(iv) Cora A.% b. Nov, 18, 1878; m. Elmore E. 

McKee. 

iv. Richard^, d. . 

V. William C^., d. ; m. Matilda How. Issue: 

(i) Lillian (ii) Orpah^ 

vi. Sarah A.", m. Allen Ratecliffe. Issue: (i) 

SamueP. (ii) Anna°. (iii) Willie''. 

vii. James M'^. viii. Virginia A^. ix. Samuel L^. 

X. Albert^. 

Col. John Malone^Dupuy, m. 2d. Elizabeth Hall, 

(p. 183). Issue: 

I. Margaret^Dupuy, m. Richard Hudson. 

II. Eliza Ann'^Dupuy, m. Richard Allen. 

III. Jane^Dupuy, m. Rev. William Crawford. 

IV. William^Dupuy, m. , of Texas, where 

they lived and all died. 

/V. Alfred^Dupuy, m. Elizabeth Martin. Issue: 
i. Louis D?., near Birmingham, Ala. 

VI. Stephen H.'^Dupuy, m. Susan Mudd. Issue: 
i. Son^, m. and has 4 sons in Ala. 

ii. Three Daughters^. 

iii. John William'^, m. , and has two daugh- 
ters, b. 1890, 1892. 

VII. Susan^Dupuy, b., 1838; d., 1900; m. James 
X Hawkins. \-\(xa>v/4vuw^ 



194 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Jesse^Dupuy, m. M. A. TJiompson, (p. 183). Issue: 

C hap. II I. I. James^Dupuy. II. Oscar O*. Dupuy, m. 

Dupuy. Evans. III. Alexander^Dupuy. 

IV. John^Dupuy. V. William^Dupuy. VI. Lucy 
N*. Dupuy, m. Hatton. 

VII. Mary^Dupuy, m. the husband of her de- 
ceased sister, Virginia. 

VIII. Virginia^Dupuy, d. ; m. Mr. Cord, a 

prominent lawyer of Flemingburgh, Ky. 

IX. Eliza Ann^Dupuy; A voluminous writer of 
fiction; Author of "The Mysterious Guest"; "The 
Dethroned Heiress" ; and sequel, "The Hidden Sin" ; 
"The Gipsy's Warning"; "The Clandestine Mar- 
riage" ; and sequel, "The Discarded Wife" ; "Micha- 
el Rudolph"; "The Cancelled Will"; and sequel, 
"Who Shall be Victor?" "All for Love;" "A new 
Way to Win a Fortune"; "Why Did He Marry 
Her?";"A Planter's Daughter" ;"Was He Guilty?" 
(Twenty-five cents each, "The F. M. Lupton Pub- 
lishing Co.," New York) ; "Morton"; "The Conspir- 
ators"; "The Hugenot Exiles", (Harper and 
Brothers, New York); etc; About 40 novels and 
novelettes; She was disappointed in love, and 

^ though afterwards had many worthy suitors, never 

married; born in Petersburg, Va., in 1814; Spent 
much of her life in Kentucky ; died, in New Orleans, 
La., in 1881. 

Benjamin^Watkins, m. Susan^Dupuy, (p. 183). 

Issue : 

Watkins. I. Mary Lefevre^W^atkins, b. Mar. 23, 1806; d. 
June 29, 1839; m. Jan. 12, 1826, Hezekiah Good 
Daniel. Issue : 
Daniel. i. Susan Ann®, m. James J. Tinsley. Issue : 
Tinsiey. (i) James Whitefield'^, m. Nannie James. 

Issue * 

1. Cecil J8., b. Aug. 24, 1879. 2. Mary L^., b. 
July 22, 1881; d. Oct. 25, 1888. 3. Robert 
BruceS b. Aug. 24, 1883. 4. Angella^ b. Oct. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY 



195 



Benjamiii^Watkins, m. Susan^Dupuy, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 



C hap. II I. 
Tinsley. 



Daniel. 



Tinsley. 



Daniel. 



Belt. 



Daniel. 



Watkins. 



Jones. 

Oakes. 
Jones. 



John Rhorer^, 
8. Irene Watkins^, b. Mar. 

(iii) Edward DanieF. 



19, 1885. 5. James W«., b. Apr. 29, 1888. G. 

Pocahontas^, b. Feb. 1, 1890. 7 

b. Nov. 9, 1892 

18, 1896. 

(ii) Mary Florence" 
(Both died infants). 
( iv. ) Robert Lee^, m. Daisy Cummings. Issue ; 

1. Louise^. 2. Annie^. 
ii. Benjamin Watkins^, never married, 
iii. Christina Agnes^, m. Jesse N. Tinsley. 
Issue : 
(i) Alonzo Calvin''', m. Sept. 1, 1858, Agnes V®. 
Fergusson ( p. 206 ) . Issue : 

1. Lavalette Amelia^. 2. Calvin Williamson^. 

3. Luther^. 4. Mary Bland®. 5. Christina®, 
(ii) Mary Jessie', m. Thomas J. Smith. Issue 
several®, (iii) William^, 
(iv) Chester^, (v) Agnes Lee'^, m. 1st. James 
Fergusson, M. D. ; m. 2d. W. Witcher. 



iv. Robert Pride*^; never 

Georgie 



married. 
(Jeter) 



V. John 
Garland. 



Henry^, m. Mrs 
Issue : ( i ) Garland'^. 
vi. Edwin Dupuy°, never married, 
vii. Mollie Angeiine% m. Oct. 18, 1859, H. Sing- 
leton Belt, M. D. Issue: 
(i) Mary D^., m. H. A. Southall. (ii) Walter 
G^.; d, 1890. (iii) Benjamin Lloyd^ 
(iv) H. Singleton^, m. 1894, Anna Easley. 
viii. William E*'., never married, ix. Jane Caro- 
line® ; d. in Washington, D. C. ; m. W. H. Ward ; 

d. . 

II. Agnes Morton^Watkins, b. Sept. 4, 1807; d. 
Feb. 2, 1882; m.. May 24, 1832, Thomas S. Jones; 
d. June 4, 1853. Issue: 

i. Frffnces Ann% b. Mar. 30, 1834; m. Oct. 22, 
1858, George Oakes. Issue: 
(i) Travis'^, (ii) Albert^, (iii) Alice''. 



ii. John E*'., b. 



Aug. 



14, 1835 ; m. 1st. Nov. 16, 



196 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Benjamin'^Watkins, m. Susan^Dupuy, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 



Chap. III. 



Jones. 



Ragsdale. 
Jones. 



Payne. 
Jones. 

Fitts. 



1858, Mary M. Leftwich, b. June 25, 1832; d. 
Oct. 3, 1861. Issue: (i) Leftwich^. (ii) Ma- 
tilda^, m. Keatts; Jno. E*^., m. 2d. Lucy C. 

Steptoe, b., 1842; d., 1890. Issue: (iii) 

Charles^, (iv) Thomas^, (v) Ruth^. (vi) Nellie^ 

(vii) Emma Hayse^, b. Apr., 1883; adopted by 

her aunt, Mrs. Sallie S. Payne. 

iii. Susan Jane^, b. Sept. 15, 1836. 

iv. Mary Ellen^ b. July 21, 1838; m., 1865, 

Charles Ragsdale. Issue : 

(i) Isla G"^. (ii) Lula^, m. Samuel Mooreman. 
V. Martha Smith«, b. Nov. 27, 1839. vi. Carrie 
W«., b. Apr. 5, 1841. 

vii. Benjamin Watkins% b. Jan. 24, 1843; m. 
Sept., 1882, Nannie Townes'^Watkins (p. 200). 
Issue : 

(i) Susan Agnes^, b. Feb., 1885. (ii) Irvine 

Townes^ b., 1889. (iii) Nannie Townes^ b., 

1893. (iv) Josephine^ b., 1896. (v) Benja- 

min% b., 1897. 
viii. Thomas Smith% b. Nov. 22, 1845 ; d. Jan. 2, 
1895; m. Jan. 1884, Pauline Smith. Issue: 

(i) Thomas S^ (ii) Willie^, (iii) Ralphs (iv) 

Pauline^, 
ix. Eliza A^ \ b. April f d. Julv 5, 1855. 
X. Sallie S*^. j 13, 1848 "\ m. Dec. 4, 1873, J. J. 

Payne, b. Aug., 1844; d. July 25, 1880. Issue: (i) 

William Anderson^ b. Aug. 16, 1875. (ii) 

Thomas J^., b. June 30, 187S. 

xi. Henry Clay^, b. Aug. 28, 1850. 

xii. Agnes Morton^, b. Jan. 15, 1853; m. Feb. 14, 

1882, Col. Sandford Fitts. Issue : 
(i) Agnes Morton^, (ii) Harry^, (iii) Carrie 
W^ (iv) Sanford Brooks', (v) Benjamin^ 
d. . 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 



197 



C hap. Il l 
Watkins. 



Scott. 



Crabtree. 

Souther- 
land. 

Scott. 



Sergeant. 



Watkins. 



Martin, 



Watkins. 



Benjamin^ Watkins, m. Susan^Dupuy, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 

■ III. Jane Edmunds^ Watkins, b. Jan. 29, 1809; d. 
July 15, 1880; m., Nov. 13, 1845, David Scott, b. 
Oct. 31, 1797; d. Sept. 11, 1875. Issue: 

i. Benjamin Watkins% b. Sept. 24, 1846; d. 
Sept. 17, 1873. 

ii. Susan Dupuy^, b. June 4, 1848; d. Apr. 29, 
1887; m. Jan. 9, 1872, Albert P. Crahtree. Issue: 

(i) George Watkins^ b. Aug. 26, 1873. 

(ii) Susan Warner^, b. Jan. 9, 1878; m. Jan. 

6, 1898, George Cornelius Southerland. Issue: 
1. George Gornelius^ b. Nov. 3, 1898. 

iii. Edwin Hoge% b. Dec. 15, 1849; m. . No 

issue. 

iv. Josephine Emma^, b. Oct. 23, 1852; m. Oct. 
5, 1875, William Thompson Sergeant, b. Dec. 
27, 1853. Issue: (i) Walter Scott^ b. Nov. 7, 
1876 ; m. Mav 9, 1900, Caroline Britt Smith, b. 
Nov. 18, 1877. Issue: 1. Walter Edwin^, b. 
Apr. 19, 1901. 2. Carryl Lee^ b. Jan. 6, 1903. 
(ii) David Evins^ b. Sept. 4, 1881. (iii) Wil- 
liam Watkins^ b. Sept. 10, 1883. 
IV. John Dupuy^ Watkins, b. Sept. 26, 1810; m. 
1st., Mar. 9, 1836, Jane Martin; d., 1840. Issue: 
i. Susan Jane^, m. Col. William H. Worth ; Jno. 
D^., m. 2d. Aug. 6, 1844, Phoebe A. Stone. Issue : 
ii. Phoebe AugustaS b. July 28, 1845. 
iii. Mary Florence*^, b. Mar. 27, 1847; m., Jan. 
27, 1868, Col. James Martin. Issue: 

(i) Mary Williams^ b. Nov. 20, 1868. 

Florence Watkins', b. Feb. 28, 1873; d. 

3, 1891. 

(iii) Anna Dupuy^ b. Mar. 14, 1878. (iv) 

rie Payne^ b. Oct. 24, 1881. 

(v) Sarah Roberta^ b. May 16, 1883. 
iv. Caroline Virginia^, b. Oct. 18, 1848 ; d. Mar. 
17, 1881; m., Aug. 26, 1874, Rev. Charles Mont- 
f^omery Payne, b., in Lexington, N. C. ; d., in 
Washington, N. C, 1900; (Davidson College, 



(ii) 
July 

Car- 



198 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Benjamin^Watkins, m. Susan^Dupuy, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. N. C, B. A., 1873 ; Union Theological Seminary, 
Va., 1873; Licensed, Apr. 6, 1872; Ordained, 
^^^^ Apr. 17, 1873, by the Presbytery of Orange; 
Stated Supply and Pastor of Mt. Airy, Madison, 
Leaksville and Wentworth, N. C, 1872-74; Pas- 
tor of the Second church of Wilmington, N. C, 
1874-84, of the First church of Concord, N. C, 
1884-94, and of the Washington church, N. C, 
1894-1900; D. D., 1890). Issue: 

(i) Mary Augusta^ b. Sept. 14, 1875; d. May 

26, 1888. . 

(ii) Roberta Lee^ b. Dec. 30, 1879; d. May 16, 

1883. 
Watkins. V. Samuel Ferdinand^, b. July 13, 1850; m., 
Feb. 14, 1883, Rosa Elizabeth Watkins. Issue: 

(i) Rosa Elizabeth"^, b. May 15, 1884. (ii) 

John Franklin^ b. Aug. 8, 1888. 
vi. Benjamin Franklin^, b. Jan. 25, 1855; m., 
Jan. 3, 1894, Sherly Chenault. Issue : 

(i) Franklin Chenault^ b. Dec. 30, 1894. (ii) 

Sherly Caroline^ b. June 11, 1897. 
vii.. John Dupuy% b. Mar. 2, 1857; d. July 2, 
1859. 
viii. Lettie Stone^ b. Aug. 18, 1859; d. Sept. 2, 

. ix. Ida Lee% b. Apr. 17, 1861. 

V. Thomas JoeP Watkins, b. Oct. 19, 1812; d. 
July 6, 1879; m., Aug. 18, 1842, Sallie Gunn. Issue: 
i. Susan Ann*^. ii. Mollie DanieP. (Both died 
infants). 

iii. Daniel Gunn^, b. Sept. 25, 1857 ; m. June 10, 
1884, Lydia A. Powell, b. Apr. 13, 1865. Issue : 

(i) Edna EarF, b. Feb. 27, 1885. (ii) Wilbur 

L^., b. Apr. 10, 1886. (iii) Annie Louise'^, b. 

June 24, 1888; d. July 21, 1899. (iv) Lucile 

Ann^, b. Mar. 3, 1890. (v) Henrv Thomas^, 

b. Dec. 23, 1891. (vi) Katherine Christa^ b. 

Dec. 24, 1893. (vii) Du Gee^ b. Apr. 26, 1895. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 199 

Benjamin'^Watkins, m. Susan^Dupuy, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap III (vii) Maggie Lyle^, b. Feb. 22, 1897, (ix) Sal- 

lie A^., b. Nov. 22, 1898. 

Watkins. yj Prances Ann^Watkins, b. Oct. 2, 1814; d. 
June 20, 1840; m., Dec. 14, 1831, Robt. W. Wil- 
liams. Issue : 
Williams. i- Benjamin Watkins^. ii. Robert Martin^, ill. 

Cornelia^, iv. Sallie Jane^. 
Watkins. VII. Stephen Henry^ Watkins, b. June 11, 1816; 
d. in Texas. Never married. 

VIII. Caroline Hunt^ Watkins, b. Mar. 18, 1819; 
m., Oct. 25,. 1837, Maj. George W. Martin. Issue : 
Martin. i. Susan G*^. ii. William Watkins^, killed, in bat- 
tle, in C. S. A. iii. George^, m. Vance, iv. 

Joseph Benjamin^, v. John H^. vi. Catherine^, 

m. Stocks, vii. Emma Dupuy^. viii. 

Thomas Henry*^. 
Watkins. IX- Benjamin Franklin^Watkins, b, Nov. 6, 
' 1820 ; d. Aug. 11, 1853 ; m.. May 16, 1849, Lucy Ann 
Paxton. Issue : 

i. Samuel Price^, b. May 21, 1850; m., Jan. 21, 
1873, Maria G. Stade, b. June 24, 1854. Issue: 
(i) Joseph P^., b. Jan. 22, 1876. (ii) Lucy P^., 
b. Apr. 15, 1878. (iii) Carrie D^.,b. Aug. 2, 1879. 
(iv) SamueF, b. Nov. 18, 1882. (v) Elizabeth 
W^, b. May 15, 1885. 
ii. Susan C°., b. May 29, 1852; m., July 20, 1869, 
J, Millard F. McKinsey, b. May 3, 1849. Issue : 

Kinsey. (i) Annie W^., b. Sept. 26, 1870. (ii) Carrie 

Priced b. Sept. 2, 1877. (iii) Millard F^., b. 
Oct. 10, 1880. (iv) Benjamin F^., b. Sept. 26, 
1882. 
Watkins. X. Henry Anderson^Watkins, M. D. ; Philadel- 
phia College of Physicians and Surgeons; Prac- 
tised Medicine about Darlington Heights, Prince 
Edward county, Va; b. May 4, 1822; d., in Pittsyl- 
vania county, Va., May 1902, at the home of his 
son-in-law, B. W. Jones; m., Jan. 1, 1852, Susan 



200 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Watkins. 



Benjamin^Watkins, m. Siisan^Dupuy, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. in. Agnes^ Walker, of Prince Edward Co., Va., (p. 

~7r 219 ) . . Issue : 
watkins. . William Walker^, b. July, 1853; d. Dee., 1861. 

ii. Benjamin^, b. Oct., 1855. iii. Nannie Townea®, 
b. Nov., 1856; m. B. W. Jones, (p. 196). 
iv. Henry Martin^ b Jan., 1859; d. Oct., 1860. 
V. Mary Josephine*^, b. July, 1861 ; d. May, 1899. 
vi. Joseph Dupuy^, b. Mar., 1864; d. Apr., 1864. 
vii. Susan Walker^, b. June, 1865; m. James 
Raymond Morton, of Savanna, Ga. Issue: 

Morton. (i) James Raymond'^, b. May, 1892; d. . 

(ii) James Raymond^, (iii) Louise Minor', 
viii. John Dupuy®, b. June, 1868; m., in Texas, 

Maude . Issue: (i) John Dupuy^. 

XI. Susan Elizabeth^Watkins, b. June 4, 1823; 
d. Mar. 3, 1891 ; m., Mar. 10, 1845, David Cummins 
Mehmie, M. D., b. Dec. 18, 1805; d. May 23, 1866. 
Issue: 

i. Annie Dupuy^, b. June 15, 1846; d. June 20, 
1856. 

ii. Mary Ellen% b. Oct. 20, 1848; m., Dec. 31, 
1879, Rev. Franklin Pierce Ramsay, b., in Pike 
county, Ala.; (Davidson College N. C, A. B. 
and A. M., and Ph. D, of the University of Chi- 
cago, President and Professor of Bible and Phil- 
osophy of King College, Va., 1906 ;Licensed, Apr., 
1881, by the Presbytery of East Alabama; Or- 
dained, Oct., 1881, by the Presbytery of Western 
Texas; Evangelist, Laredo, Tex., 1881-83; Pas- 
tor of New Dublin, Va., 1883-85, of Wethered- 
ville, Md., 1886-90; Evangelist of the Presby- 
tery of Tuscaloosa, 1890; Pastor of Augusta, 
Ky., and Sharon, Ky., 1891-96; President of 
Fredericksburg College, Va., 1899-1900; Stated 
Supply of Oxford, Jacksonville and Merrelton, 
Ala., 1901- ). Issue: (i) Robert Lee'^. (ii) 
Franklin Pierce'^; A. B. of King College and 
Student of the University of Chicago; Profes- 



Mebane. 



Ramsay. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 



201 



Benjamin^Watkins, m. Susan^Dupuy, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 



C hap. II I. 
Mebane. 



Ramsay. 
Mebane. 



sor of Science in King College, Va. ( iii ) Nellie'', 
iii. Rev. Benjamin Watkins*^; Davidson Col- 
lege, N. C, B. A., 1875; M. A., 1884; D. D., 1899; 
Union Theological Seminary, Va., 1878; Li- 
censed, Apr. 29, 1878 ; Ordained, Nov. 16, 1878, 
by tlie Presbytery of Orange; Pastor of Gra- 
ham, N. C, 1878-80; Stated Supply of Hillsville 
and Old Town, Va., and of Mt. Airy, N. C, 1881- 
82; Pastor of Bristol, Va., 1882-85, of River 
View, Va., 1883-89, of Maysville, Ky., 1890-92, 
of Radford, Va., 1892-96, and of Fredericksburg, 
Va., 1896-99; Co-Principal of Cluster Springs 
Academy, Halifax Co., .Va., 1899-1901; Pastor 
Elect, of Madison, Pine Hall, and Stated Supply 
of Wentwortb, N. C, 1901 ; Pastor of Mt. Airy, 
N. C, 1904- ; b., in Greensboro, N. C, May 26, 
1850; m., Nov. 21, 1878, Elizabeth Gallaway 
Carter, b. Sept. 5, 1850. Issue: 
( i ) David Cummins^, b. Sept. 20, 1879 ; d. Nov. 
7, 1881. 

(ii) Mary Gallaway^ b. Feb. 11, 1881; ap- 
pointed, 1904, Missionary to Japan, by the Ex- 
ecutive Committee of Foreign Missions, Pres- 
bvterian church in U. S. 

(iii) William Carter^ b. Nov. 1, 1882; M. D.; 
m., Mt. Airy, N. C, Oct. 11, 1906, Susan Mott, 
Daughter of Dr. Henry Y. Mott. (iv) Alice 
Farley^ b. Dec. 26, 1883. 
iv. Susan Agnes^, b. Mar. 3, 1852; m., Mar. 26, 
1883, E. M. Ramsay. Issue: 

(i) Lola^ (ii) John^ (iii) Ellen^ 
Y. Caroline Nelson^, b. Dec. 24, 1854; d. June 
27, 1855. 

vi. David Cummins^ M. D., b. Apr. 3, 1856; m. 
1st., Apr. 3, 1883, Alice E. Farley; d. Jan. 16, 
1884; m. 2d., Jessie Spearing. Issue: (i) 
Thomas^, (ii) Ramsey^ (iii) Jessie'^. 



202 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Mebane. 



Benjamin^Watkins, m. Susan'^Dupuy, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. vii. Jennie Dupuy*', b. May 12, 1858; d. Apr. 26, 
1860. 

viii. Rev. William Nelson®; Davidson College, 
N. C, B. A. and A. M. ; and B. D., and Ph. D., 
of the University of Chicago ; Professor of Lan- 
guages in King College, Va., 1906; University 
of Chicago, Semitic Language, 1897; Licensed, 

1888, by the Presbytery of Nashville; Ordained, 

1889, by the Presbytery of Ebenezer; Stated 
Supply of Kerrville, Tenn, 1886, of Pulaski and 
Draper's Valley, Va., 1888-89, of Vanceburg and 
Greenup, Ky., 1889-94; Professor of Greek and 
German in the Fredericksburg College, Va., 
1897-99 ; Co-Principal of Cluster Springs Acad- 
emy, Halifax county, Va., 1899-1900; Professor 
of Hanover College, Ind. 1900- ; b., in Greens- 
boro, N. C, June'^lO, 1860; m., Dec. 21, 1887, 
Pauline Evelyn Kent, b. July 8, 1858. Issue: 

(i) Elizabeth Kent^ b. Sept. 24, 1888; d. Aug. 

9, 1898. 

(ii) Margaret Archer^, b. Nov. 16, 1890; d. Aug. 

9, 1898. 

(iii) Helen Watkins^ b. Feb. 26, 1893. (iv) 

William Nelson^, b. Oct. 3, 1896. 
ix. Robert Lee*', b. Aug. 6, 1862; d. June 24, 
1880. 
Watkins. XII. William Lafayette^ Watkins, b. Nov. 7, 



1824; d. 



; m. 1st. Ellen Bowen. Issue: 



i. Mary^ ii. Ellen S. Bowen^; Wm. L^ m. 2d. 
Mary Craig. Issue others® 

John^WatJcins, m. Nancy Wilson, (p. 183). Issue: 

I. Sallie EllisnVatkins, b. Sept. 1, 1808 ; m. Eli- 
sha. Plummer. Issue: 
Piummer. i- John Watkins®, b. July 7, 1828. ii and iii 

Daughters®. 
Watkins. II. Thomas Hardin^ Watkins, b. Feb. 18, 1810; 
m. Leatitia Saunders. Issue: 



LINE OF PETERS DUPUY. 



203 



John'^Watkins, m. Nancy Wilson, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. i- Judith Saunders^, ii. Sallie Ellis^. iii. Ann 



Watkins. 



vi. 



IV. Susan L^. v. Mary Thomas^. 
America Hairston*^, m. George Hairston*^ 
Watldns (below), vii. SamueP. viii. Ellen*^. 
III. Magdalene Dupuy^ Watkins, b. Apr. 2, 1811; 
m. Peter Shelton, Three of his sons served in the 
C. S. A. Issue: 
Sheiton. i. William Henderson^, d. Nov. 1900. ii. Sarah*, 
iii. John Wilson*^, iv. Ann Watkins*^, m. James 
Martin of Leaksville, N. C. Issue : 
Martin. (i) Eliza. Davis^ |b. Oct, 11, id. Sept., 1868, 

(ii) Mag. Watkins' 1 1867 1 m. Nov. 11, 1886, 
William M. Stultz, Issue : 
stuitz. 1. Francis Field^, b. Dec. 11, 1887. 2. Annie 

Virginia^, b. July 28, 1889. 3. Magdalene 
Staite^, b. Nov. 3, 1892. 4. James Davis^, b. 
Jan. 18, 1894. 5. Svdnor MarshalP, b. Dec. 
24, 1897. 6. Susan Reive^ b. Aug. 25, 1899. 
V. Ruth^. vi. Peter^. vii. Mary E^. viii. Louise*, 
X. Thomas*, xi. James*, xii. 



Sheiton. 



ix. Virginia*. 
George*. 
Watkins. IV. Nancy Wilson^Watkins, b. Dec. 21, 1812; m. 
Mullins. Issue 5 sons* and 2 daughters*. 

V. Elizabeth P.^W^atkins, b., Nov. 17, 1814; m. 
Southall; moved West. Issue: 1 son*. 2 daughters*. 

VI. Peter Wilson^ Watkins, b. July 23, 1815; m. 
Louisa Hairston, b. Apr. 1, 1821. Issue: 

i. George Hairston*, b. Sept. 6, 1845; m. Amer- 
ica Hairston''Watkins (above). Issue: 
(i) Mary Saunders^ (ii) Thomas^ (iii) 
Louisa'^, (iv) Peter Dupuy'^. (v) SamueF. (vi) 
Leatitia'^, 
ii. Nancy Wilson*, b. May 18, 1848 ; m., Nov. 23, 
1869, George Stovals Hairston. Issue: 
Hairston. (i) George R'^., b. Jan. 12, 1870. (ii) Louise^. 

(iii) Peter Watkins^. (iv) Matilda Martini 
Watkins. iii. Louise*, b. Aug. 15, 1852; m. John Tyler 
Hairston. Issue : 



204 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

John^Watkins, m. Nancy Wilson, (p. 183). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. (i) Eliza P^. (ii) Peter Watkins"^. (iii) Louise''. 
Hairston. (iv) SamueF. 

Watkins. ^^- Susan Maria^, b. May 16, 1856; d. July 28, 
1856. V. Elizabeth Magdalene% b. Oct. 10, 1862. 
VII. Susan Ann^ Watkins, b. May 24, 1818; d., 
1869 ; m. Benjamin Barrow. Five of his sons served 
in the C. S. A. Issue : i. Oren Williams^. 
Barrow. ii- Mary Elizabeth^, b. Nov. 17, 1840; d. June 
20, 1900; m., 1859, Jesse H. Turner, M. D. Issue: 
Turner. (i) Leonora^, m. E. W. Dixson, of Danville, 

Va. Issue four^ (ii) Walter R'. (iii) Ed- 
ward P^. (iv) Ella^. (v) Daughter^, m. Benja- 
min W. Dodson. (vi) Oren Barrow'^, (vii) 
Jessie May^. (viii) William Watkins'^. (ix) 
Irvine^. 

Barrow. iii. Watkins^, m. Dixson. Issue: Three''. 

iv. Nannie*', m. Lee. Issue: Four^. v. 

John Armstead*', moved West; m. . vi. 

Roberf^ ; Killed in battle in C. S. A. vii. Cas- 
sandia^, m. Clark Stone. Issue several, viii. 

Benjamin Franklin^, m. Sheffield. Issue 

several, ix. Peter Thomas^, m. Dora Guerrant, 
of Leaksville, N. C. Issue : 6 or 7. 

Stephen Dupuy^WatJcins, m. Sarah HolmanWupuy, 

(p. 183). Issue: 

Watkins. I. Mary Louisa^ Watkins, b. Mar. 22, 1819 ; d. Oct. 
8, 1820. 

II. Thomas Linnaeus^ Watkins, b. Oct. 20, 1821; 
d. Sept. 24, 1823. 

III. Washington Lafayette^ Watkins ; Lawyer; 
b. Jan. 10, 1824; m. 1st., June 10, 1851, Maria So- 
phia Hall, b. June 4, 1833 ; d. Sept. 21, 1864 ; m. 2d., 
Oct. 9, 1866, Lizzie Stringfellow, b. Sept. 9, 1845. 
Issue by 1st. m : 

1. Thomas Gholson^, b. June 17, 1852. ii. John 
Dupuy^, b. July 13, 1854. iii. Anna Martin®, b. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 



205 



Stephen Dupuy^Watkins, m. Sarah Holman^Dupuy, 
(p. 183). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. July 20, 1856; d. Dec. 17, 1857. iv. Harriet 
Watkins. HalP, b. Mar. 20, 1858; d. July 18, 1859. 

V. Sallie Harrison^, b. Aug. 7, 1860. vi. Alverda 
HalP, b. May 19, 1862; d. 1864. vii. Maria HalP, 
b. May 3, 1864 ; d. May 17, 1865. 

IV. Anna Margaret^ Watkins, b. May 16, 1826; 
d. May 22, 1866; m., Sept. 25, 1861, Richard Ster- 
ling Taliaferro, b. June 12, 1807. 

V. Marcellus Dupuy^ Watkins, b. Nov. 30, 1828; 
d. Oct. 22, 1846. 

VI. Ella Amelia^ Watkins, b. Dec. 19, 1831; d. 
Sept. 1833. 

Ptolemy Lafevre'^WatJcins, m. Harriet Amasia*Du- 
puy, (p. IS-k') Issue: 

I. Mary Eletliia^Watkins, b. Jan. 10, 1826. Never 
married. 

II. Thomas Dupuy^W^atkins, b. Dec. 9, 1827; 
Killed in C. S. A., at Appomattox C. H., Apr. 7, 
1865. 

III. Margaret Louisa^ Watkins, b. July 17, 1830; 
d. Oct. 28, 1856. 

IV. Powhatan Virginius^ Watkins, b. Mar. 17, 
1832 ; d. July 1, 1835. 

V. Adelaide Amelia^Watkins, b. Mar. 16, 1835; 
,m. 1st., Jan. 18, 1853, Rev. William Milner Fergus- 
son (Baptist), b. Sept. 22, 1822; d. Aug. 2, 1864; 
m. 2d., May 24, 1876, Peter Hunter, b. Sept. 6, 1804. 

Fergus ^^^^^ by 1st. m : 
son. " i. Mary Elethia«, b. Aug. 10, 1854 ; d. Oct., 1895; 
m.. May 5, 1873, George Washington Sioain, b. 
June 16, 1846. Issue: 
Swain. (i) Elva Dupuy^, b. Aug. 30, 1875. (ii) Loula 

W^atkins", b. Apr. 22, 1878. (iii) Nellie May", 
b. Sept. 24, 1870. (iv) Gracie Lvnn", b. June 
9, 1882. (v) Linda Hume", b. Apr. 23, 1885. 
(vi) Mary George", b. Sept. 19, 1887. (vii) 



206 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 

Ptolemy Lafevre^Watkins, m. Harriet Amasia^Du- 
puy, fp. 184)' Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. Wycliff^ b. Jan. 6, 1889. (viii) George Car- 

Swain. rie^ b. Sept. 20, 1892. (ix) Mary Adelaide^ 

Fergus- b. Oct. 2, 1895. 

son- ii. Harriet Louisa^ b. June 24, 1855; d. Dec. 27, 

1865. 

iii. Samuel James®, b. Sept. 10, 1856 ; moved to 

Louisville, Ky., and m. . 

iv. Agnes Virginia^ b. Sept. 11, 1858; m. Alonzo 
C^Tinslev (p. 195). 

V. Elizabeth NoeP, b. Oct. 4, 1862; m. Benjamin 
William- F. Williamson. Issue: 
son. (i) MabelE^, b. Mar. 16, 1862;d. Dec.2, 1901. 

(ii) Maria Dupuy% b. May 1, 1884. (iii) 
Alma^ b. Nov. 12, 1886. (iv) Malcomb^ b. 
June 25, 1888. 
Watkins. VI. Charlotte Harris^Watkins, b. Jan. 6, 1839; 
d. Mar. 28, 1843. 

VII. Peter Dupuy^ Watkins, b. Dec. 12, 1840; d. 
Aug. 16, 1862. 

VIII. James Martin^Watkins, b. June 23, 1842; 
d. June 6, 1843. 

IX. Linnaeus Dupuy= Watkins, b. Apr. 12, 1844 ; 
d. May 31, 1864, of wounds received in battle, at 
"Drewry's Bluff," May 16, 1864, in C. S. A. Never 
married 

X. Harriet Virginia^ Watkins, b. Feb. 10, 1846; 
m., Feb. 16, 1875, John Thomas Thornton, b. Mar. 

Thorn ^' 1848. Issue: 

ton ' i. Thomas Jefferson®, b. Dec. 18, 1875 ; d. July 
23, 1877. ii. Watkins Lefevre®, b. July 9, 1878. 
iii. John Henry®, b. Mar. 13, 1882. iv. Martin 
Dupuy®, b. Sept. 3, 1884. 

John Bartholomew^ Dupuy, m. Henrietta L. Hunter, 

(p. 18 ff). Issue: 

Dupuy. I. Watkins® Dupuy; Not eligible for field service, 
he was detailed to recruit for the C. S. A.; b., in 
Prince Edward county, Va., Feb. 20, 1843; d., in 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 207 

John Bartholomew^ Dupuy , m. Henrietta L. Hunter, 

(p. 18Jf). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. Texas. Dec. 5, 1894; m. Rosa B. Leigh, of Prince 
Dupuy. Edward Co., Va. Issue: 

i. Benjamin Hunter^; Printer on the staff of 
"The New York Journal ;" b., in Prince Edward 
Co., Va., Sept. 18, 1876. 

ii. John Watkins"; Volunteer in the Spanish- 
American War; mustered in, Richmond, Va., 
May 12, 1898 ; member of Company G., from Ro- 
anoke, Va. ; 2d. Virginia Regiment of Infantry; 
3d. Brigade (Gen. Hasbrook) ; 2d. Division 
(Gen. Arnold); 7th Corps (Gen. Fitz Lee); 
Camped at Jacksonville, Fla., 1898 ; Ordered to 
Richmond, Va., 1898, and, with his company, 
mustered out of service, at Roanoke, Va., Dec. 
15, 1898 ; b., in Prince Edward Co., Va., May 20, 
1878; m., Sept. 27, 1898, Annie Laurie Rooker, 
of Roanoke, Va., b. Mar. 23, 1877. Issue: 
(i) John Bartholomew^, b., in Roanoke, Va., 
Aug. 13, 1899. (ii) Annie Leigh^ b., in Roa- 
noke, Va., July 28, 1903. 
iii. James Lefevre^; Volunteer in the Spanish- 
American War; Mustered in, Richmond, Va., 
May 14, 1898; Member of Company K., from 
Petersburg, Va. ; 4th Virginia Regiment of In- 
fantry; 3d. Brigade (Gen. Hasbrook) ; 2d. Di- 
vision (Gen. Arnold) ; 7th Corps (Gen. Fitz 
Lee) ; Camped at Jacksonville, Fla., 1898; En- 
tered Havana, Cuba, Dec. 20, 1890; Mustered 
out with his regiment, in Savannah, Ga., Apr. 
27, 1899; b., in Prince Edward Co., Va., Apr. 
15, 1880. 

iv. Henry Leigh '^, b., in Prince Edward Co., Va., 
Sept. 15. 1882^ d., in Roanoke, Va., Nov. 8, 1889. 
II. Rev. Benjamin Hunter'^Dupuy ; Volunteer, 
May, 1863, in the First Richmond Howitzers, Cab- 
ell's Battalion of Artillery, Longstreet's Corps, C. S. 
A. ; Mustered in at Culpeper Court House, Va., June, 
1863; Engaged in the battles of Gettysburg, Pa., 



208 GENEALOGY WITH BKIEF SKETCHES. 

John Bartholomew^ Dupuy, m. Henrietta L. Hunter, 

(p. 184)' Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. July 2, 3, 1863, of Spottsylvania Court House, May, 
Dupuy. and of Cole Harbor, Va., June, 1864; Retreated 
with his company to Appomattox Court House, Va., 
1865; Escaped from surrendering with Gen. Lee's 
army, Apr. 10, 1865, and after the surrender of 
Gen. Johnson's army, Apr. 26, took the oath of 
allegiance to the United States, in Farmville, Va., 
May, 1865; Hampden- Sidney College, Va., 1873; 
Union Theological Seminary, Va., 1876; Licensed, 
Apr. 1876, by the Presbytery of Roanoke; Or- 
dained, Aug., 1876, by the Presbytery of East Han- 
over; Pastor of the Powhatan and Stated Supply of 
the Willis churches, Va., 1876-83 ; Evangelist of the 
Presbytery of Western District, Tenn., 1883-84; 
Pastor of the Second church, St. Joseph, Mo., 1884- 
86, of Carrollton, Mo., 1886-88, of Higginsville, Mo., 
1888-93; Pastor Elect of Waxahachie, Tex., 1894; 
Pastor of Water Valley, Miss., 1894-98; Stated 
Supply of Marion, Ky., i900-01, and of Big Spring 
and Bloomfleld, Ky., 1902-03 ; Pastor of Davis, W. 
Va., 1904-06, and of Beverly, W. Va., 1906- ; While 
without a regular charge, 1898-99, supplied the Pry- 
tania Street church, of New Orleans, La., the Cen- 
tral church, of Knoxville, Tenn., and the Second 
and Alabama St. Churches of Memphis, Tenn.; 
The following minute was made by the Second 
church of Memphis, and published in the church 
papers: "Memphis, Tenn., Sept. 24, 1899. In the 
absence of Dr. N. M. Woods for the last six weeks, 
the Rev. B. H. Dupuy has been our Pastor. As he 
leaves us, we as a Session make record of the emi- 
nently satisfactory manner in which he has served 
our church. He has preached the Word in its sim- 
plicity and power. He has preached Christ and 
Him crucified as the sinner's only hope, with lov- 
ing earnestness and effectiveness. He has preached 
to Christians, the pure Gospel, faithfully, affection- 
ately and fearlessly. He is a pleasing speaker. He 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 209 

John BartholomevfDupuy, m. Henrietta L. Hunter^ 

(p. IS^i). Issue — Continued: 

C hap, ii i-nsfts no notes in his discourses. He is a logical 
Dupuy. reasoner, a man of sound sense, thoroughly evan- 
gelical and consecrated to the Master's service. 
Simple, grave, sincere, fervent and impressive in 
prayer; he illustrates by a Holy walk his disciple- 
ship with the Lord Jesus. The Session by unani- 
mous vote hereby thank him for his efficient work 
and Christian example while with us; and we re- 
turn thanks to God that He sent us this humble and 
devoted minister. We take great pleasure in com- 
mending our brother to the favorable consideration 
of any churchi in need of a good Pastor and able 
Preacher"; (Written by Judge C. W. Heiskell, and 
signed by twelve other elders) ; A frequent writer 
for the Church papers and author of this volume; 
b., in Prince Edward Co., Va., May 11, 1845 ; m., in 
Cumberland Co., Va., Nov. 30, 1876, Lelia Morton 
Blanton, b., in Cumberland Co., Va., Apr. 27, 1859 ; 
[Daughter of Dr. Hugh Lawrence and Prances Ca- 
milla (Blanton, daughter of Joseph and Susan 
(Walker) Blanton), Blanton; Son of Lawrence 
and Gillie (Colley) Blanton]. Issue: 

i. Blanton Hugo'^; Central University, Ky., 
1897; Volunteer in the Spanish-American War, 
from Monroe, La., May 1, 1898 ; Mustered in, in 
New Orleans, La., May 11, 1898; Member of 
Company B. ( Capt. F. P. Stubbs, Jr. ) ; 1st reg- 
iment of Louisiana Infantry (Col. W. Ste- 
vears) ; 1st Brigade (Gen. Loyd Wheaton) ; 1st. 
Division (Gen. Warren Keifer) ; 7th Corps 
(Gen. Fitz Lee) ; mustered out with his regi- 
ment, at Jacksonville, Fla., Oct. 3, 1898 ; A mer- 
chant by occupation; b., at "Locust Grove," the 
home of his maternal great aunts, Cumberland 
Co., Va., Nov. 3, 1877 ;'^m., at Pollock, La., Oct., 
1904, Kittie Palmore; (Daughter of Mrs. F. D. 
Palmore of Arkansas). Issue: 



210 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

€ hap. Il l- John Bartholomew^ Dupuy J m. Henrietta L. Hunter j 

^"P"y- (p. ISJf). Issue— Continued: 

(i) Hugh Palmore^, b. at Pollock, La., Aug. 
20, 1905. 

ii. Susanna Lavillon^, b., at "Willow Bank", the 
home of her maternal grandparents, Cumber- 
land Co., Va., June 10, 1879 ; m., in Water Val- 
ley, Miss., Oct. 9, 1895, Luther Smith, of Water 
Valley, Miss; (A merchant by occupation). 
Issue : 

Smith. (i) May Lucile^ b. Sept. 29, 1897. 

Dupuy. iii. Benjamin Hunter^; a Machinist by occupa- 
tion ; b., in Powhatan Co., Va., Mar. 6, 1881 ; m., 
July 6, 1903, Jeanette Shoffner, of Water Val- 
ley, Miss; (Daughter of Dr. J. H. Shoffner, 
practising physician of Water Valley, Miss., and 
District Surgeon of the Illinois Central, R. R.). 
iv. Joseph Lawrence^; An Electrician by occu- 
pation; Engaged in Lumber business; b. 
October 30, 1882, in Powhatan Co., Va. 
V. Lelia Morton^ b. June 25, 1884, in St. 
Joseph, Mo; m., Beverly, W. Va., Dec. 5, 1906, 
James Gaines Prater, of Knoxville, Tenn., b., 
Knox Co., Tenn., Mar. 4, 1876; (Farmer; Son 
of W. H. and Mary Gaines (Lee) Prater, of 
Knox Co., Tenn.) 

vi. John Davis'^, b., at "Mountain View", the 
home of his paternal grand-parents. Prince Ed- 
Ward Co., Va., Sept. 3, 1886; d., at "Willow 
Bank," the home of his maternal grandparents, 
Cumberland Co., Va., Nov. 22, 1886. ; buried at 
Brown's Presbyterian church, Cumberland Co., 
Va. 

vii. Henrietta Camilla'^, b., Carrollton, Mo., 
Aug. 17, 1888; m., Beverly, W. Va., June 27, 
1906, James Brown Parsons, of Davis, W. Va., 
b., Romney, W. Va., Jan. 9, 1879; [Civil Engi- 
neer; Volunteer in Spanish- American War; 
Son of James (deceased) and Sarah C. (Peddi- 
cord) Parsons, Davis, W. Va. 



LINE OF PETER'DUPUY. 211 

John Bartholomew^ Dupuy, m. Henrietta L. Hun- 
ter (p. 1S4). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. viii. Paul Bartholomew^, b. April 7, 1891, in 
D^. Higginsville, Mo. 

ix. Elvira May^, b. April 14, 1893, in Higgins- 
ville, Mo. 
X. James Lindsay'^, b. July 15, 1895, in Water 

Valley, Miss. 
xi. John William^ b. Jan. 26, 1898, in Water 
Valley, Miss. 

III. Henry Guerrant^Dupuy; Member of re- 
serves, C. S. A., and engaged in a skirmish at Farm- 
ville, Va., 1865, on the Retreat of Gen. R. E. Lee 
from Richmond ; b.. Prince Edward Co., Va., June 
23, 1847; m.. Falls Co., Tex., Katie A. Finley, b., 
in Meriwether Co., Ga., July 1, 1864. Settled in 
Marlin, Tex. Issue: 

i. Henry Alexander^ b. Dec. 27, 1887. ii. Rob- 
ert Hunter", b. Dec. 8, 1889. iii. Leonard Johns- 
ton"^, b. Sept. 4, 1892. iv. Nancy Katherine^; 
b. Feb. 1, 1896. v. Edward McFarlin^ h. 
Jan. 17, 1898. (All born in Falls Co., Tex). 

IV. Elizabeth May^Dupuy, b., in Prince Edward 
Co., Va., Dec. 23, 1849 ; m.,' Oct. 13, 1875, Thomas 
Cole Spencer, of Charlotte Co., Va., b., Oct. 15, 
1841 ; [Volunteer in the Charlotte County Cavalry, 
C. S. A., at the beginning of the war, and served to 
its close; Son of Rev. Thomas Cole and Eliza W. 
(Fennell) Spencer (Methodist) ; son of Tliomas 
Cole and Frances (Pearce) Spencer; Son of John 
Spencer of Charlotte Co., Va., who married Sallie 
Watkins, daughter of Thomas Watkins of Chicka- 
homoney, Va.] ; They settled in Texas about 1878. 
Issue : 

Spencer. i. John Bartholomew'^, b. in Prince Edward Co., 
Va., Aug. 26, 1877; m. Jan. 20, 1903, Mollie 
Jackson, of Palestine, Tex. Issue: (i). Thomas 
Cole^ b. Dec. 5, 1903, Palestine, Tex. 
ii. Elizabeth Mav^ b. June 14, 1879, in Falls 



212 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

John Bartholomew^ D 11 pill/, m. Henrietta L. Hun- 
ter (p. 184). Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. Co., Tex. iii. Henrietta Belle^, b. Sept. 9, 1889, 
Spencer. ^^ Tyler, Tex. 

Dupuy. V. Elvira McFarland^Dupuy, b. June 18, 1852, 
in Prince Edward Co., Va.; d. Oct. 16, 1892, in 
Roanoke, Va.; m. Wiltshire Cardwell Snead, of 
Prince Edward Co., Va.; (Volunteer m Infantry 
in C. S. A., and served to the close of the war). 
Issue : 
Snead. J- Wiltshire Lacy^, b. July 21, 1888, in Prince 

Edward Co., Va. 
Dupuy. VI. Sallie Betts^ Dupuy, b. May 30, 1858, in 
Prince Edward Co., Va. ; m., May 8, 1878, Erastus 
Alexander McGehee, of Prince Edward Co., Va. 
They settled in Roanoke, Va. No issue. 

VII. John Bartholomew^ Dupuy, b., in Prince 
Edward Co., Va., Dec. 20, 1862; m., Oct. 26, 1892, 
Lizzie Eleanor LeGrand, of Appomattox Co., Va. 
They moved from Roanoke, Va., to Pierce City, Mo., 
and thence to Inglewood, Wash. Issue : 

i. John Archer^, b. Mar. 1, 1894. ii. Henrietta 
Ruth^ b. Dec. 15, 1895. 

iii. Lily Le Grand^ b. June 27, 1898. iv. Henry 
Hunter^, b. Mar. 30, 1906. 

Henry Guerrant"^ Dupuy, in. Sarah Taylor, (p. 18Jf). 

Issue : 

I. Mary Elizabeth^ Dupuy, b. Dec. 17, 1810; d. 

Feb. 22, 1890 ; m. Aug, 21, 1839, Spencer Gilliam, 

b. Nov. 26, 1805; d. Oct. 29, 1879. Issue: 

GiUiam. i. Virginia Frances^, b. July 10, 1840; d. Apr. 

12, 1871 ; m., Feb. 14, 1860, Francis H. Thorn- 

Thorn- ^^^' ^^SUe : 

ton. (i) Frank Floyd^, m. Allie Dutton; d. . 

Issue: 1. Goldies, b. June, 1892. 2. Allied b. 
Dec, 1893. 

(ii) Lacy Wert^ b. Dec. 13, 1866; m. Flora E. 
Meadows. Issue: 1. Minnie Lee^, b. Apr. 29, 
1892. 2. Robert Lacv^ b. Mar. 3, 1894. 3. 
Bennies b. Oct. 17, 1896. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 



213 



Sears. 



Gilliam. 



Morton. 



Henry Guerrant^Dupuy, m. Sarah Taylor, (p. 184). 
Issue — Continued : 

(iii) Louis DibrelF. 

ii. Evelyn Dupuy% b. Sept. 15, 1842; d. Feb. 3, 

1870; m., June 13, 1866, Fernando C. Ford. 

Issue : 

(i) Kate Morton', m. Thomas A. Almond, (ii) 

Evelyn Asher'. 

iii. Henry Evander'^, b. Apr. 16, 1845 ; d. Dec. 21, 

1900 ; Member of the 18th Virginia Regiment of 

infantry, Pieliet's Division, Longstreets Corps, 

C. S. A. ; m., Nov. 18, 1868, M. Alice Sears, d., 

1888. Issue: (i) Gertrude Bacon^, b. Nov. 27, 

1869 ; m. Walter F. Ford. 

(ii) Harry E^, b. Aug. 3, 1871; m. Dorothy 

Turpin. (iii) Eugene Williams'^, b. Oct. 17, 

1873. (iv) Thomas Dupuy', b. Jan. 18, 1877. 

(v) Herbert Spencer^, b. Dec. 22, 1878. (vi) 

Otis Matthews^, b. June 13, 1880. (vii) Mary 

Elizabeth^ b. July 14, 1882. (viii) Alice 

Sears^, b. June 4, 1884. (ix) Myrtle^, b. Dec. 

4, 1885. (x) Leonard Statham'^, b. Dec. 7, 

1887. 
iv. Columbia Ann% b. Oct. 6, 1847; m., Feb. 19, 
1871, Samuel D. Sears. Issue: 
(i) Edward Percy^ b. May 6, 1872. (ii) Mary 
PearF, b. Mar. 3, 1874. (iii) Fannie Evelyn', 
b. Dec. 17, 1876. (iv) Bessie Hamner^, b. Oct. 
6, 1878. (v) Kate^ b. July 24, 1880. (vi) 
Herman Dupuv^ b. Oct. 21, 1883. (vii) Les- 
ter PauF, b. Sept. 30, 1885. (viii) Samuel 
Wiltse^, b. June 24, 1891. 
v. Mary Lavalette^, b. Mar. 16, 1850: m., Nov. 
1, 1871, Charles S, Morton, M. D. ; (Surgeon of 
the 57th North Carolina Regiment of Infantry, 
Earley's Division, C. S. A,). Issue: 
(i) Charles Francis^ b. Aug. 11, 1872; d. Jan. 
19, 1898. (ii) Marshall^ b. Apr. 25, 1874. 
(iii) James Rawlings^ b. Jan. 22, 1876; d. 



214 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Henry Querranf^Dupuy , m. Sarah Taylor, (p. 18Jf). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. II I. June 20, 1876. (iv) Mary Evelyn^, b. May 1, 
i^^^n, 1877; m., Apr. 25, 1899, Lucius Polk Dillon. 
(v) Evangeline^, b. July 24, 1879. (vi) Henry 
Wilson^ b. July 9, 1881. (vii) John Taylor^ 
b. Apr. 17, 1884. (viii) William Gilliam^ b. 
Sept. 25, 1886. (ix) Elsie Venner^ b. Sept. 
22, 1889. (x) Robert Finley% b. Nov. 11, 
1891. 
Dupuy. II, Frances Eliza^Dupuy, b. Sept. 13, 1813; m., 
1837, Clayton Gilliam, b. June 12, 1812. They emi- 
grated from Prince Edward Co., Va., about 1837, 
and settled in Cadiz, Ky. Issue: 
GiiUam. i. Adolphus H^., b, in Cadiz, Ky., May 21, 1849; 
d. Dec. 25, 1892 ; m., Sept. 25, 1871, Frances M. 
Harper, b. Dec. 14, 1855. Issue: 
(i) PearF, b., near Boaz, Ky., Mar. 5, 1873; 
m., Feb. 11, 1892. Lawrence Albritten. 
(ii) Holly^ b., near Boaz, Ky., Jan. 16, 1878. 
(iii) Adolphus Howard^, b., near Boaz, Ky., 
Mar. 20, 1885. 
ii. Richard C^., b., in Cadiz, Ky., Aug. 15, 1851. 
iii. William A«., b., in Cadiz, Ky., Feb. 23, 1855; 
d. Aug. 30, 1901; m., Sept. 4, 1879, Maggie A. 
Heifer, b. June 20, 1860 ; d. Jan. 8, 1902. Issue: 
(i) Freddie E^., b. Aug. 17, 1881. (ii) Homer 
A^, b. Mar. 24, 1884. (iii) and (iv) Richard 
C. and Rufus C, b., Aug. 15, 1888. (v) 



7 



•) 



Glodvs^ b. Apr. 22, 1895. (vi) William A 
b. Dec. 19, 1896. 

iv. Clifton Dupuy^ b., in Cadiz, Ky., Feb. 25, 
1857; m., Oct. 9, 1879, Mattie Pryor, b. Jan. 6, 
1860. Issue : 
(i) Nettie^ b. Nov. 6, 1880; m., Nov. 19, 1897, 
Boss Kaler. Issue : 1. Rov^, b. June 15, 1899. 
(ii) Cleveland^ b. Nov. 30, 1882. (iii) Wal- 
ter^ b. Feb. 6, 1885. (iv) Carless^ b. Apr. 13, 
1887. (v) Harry % b. Feb. 17, 1891. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 215 

Jane^Dupiiy, m. Nicholas Edmunds^ (p. 185). 

Issue : 

Chapjii. I, Thomas^ Edmunds, b., in Charlotte Co., Va. 
Ed- 1809 ; m. Fannie Morton. They settled in the vicin 

munds. j^^ ^^ Hebron Presbyterian Church, Charlotte Co. 
Va. Issue : 

i. Nicholas^, ii. Elizabeth^, iii. Thomas*, M 
D. iv. Jane^, m. William R. Daniels. 
V. William^, vi. Frances^, vii. Mary^. viii 
Sterling*^, ix. SamueP. 

X. Sallie^, m. Rev. Paul F. Broion; (Hampden 
Sidney College, Va., 1872; Union Theological 
Seminary, Va. 1875; Licensed, Apr. 24, 1875 
Ordained, Apr. 1880, by the Presbytery of Roa 
noke, which licensed him; Evangelist of the 
Presbytery of Roanoke, 1875-82, and in Ken 
tucky, 1882-83; Pastor at Buckingham C. H. 
Va., 1883-86, of Brunswick,. Ga., 1886-92, of St 
Elmo and Lookout Mountain, Tenn., 1892-96 
of Bartow, Fla., 1897-99; Stated Supply of 
Central church, Knoxville, Tenn., 1900-01, and 
of 2d. ch., Jacksonville, Fla., 1901 — ). Issue 
SeveraF. 

II. Mary Dupuy^Edmunds, b., in Charlotte Co. 
Va.; d. Aug. 27, 1839; m., May 15, 1834, Col 
Joseph^Dupuy, (p. 189). No issue. 

III. Henry Edwin^Edmunds, b., in Charlotte 
Co. Va., Jan. 20, 1813 ; m. Lucy J. Barksdale. They 
settled in the vicinity of the Hebron Presbyterian 
church, Charlotte Co., Va. Issue: 

i. Belle^ ; d. ; m. Samuel Morton, of South 

Boston, Va. Issue: 
Morton. ^^^ Samuel', (ii) Lucy^. (iii) Lottie^ (iv) 

Edwin^ 

^nds "■ ^ Jcholas^, m . Settled in Hopkinsville, 

Ky. 

iii. Lottie^, m. Wimbish, of Mecklenburg 

Co., Va. 

iv. Henrv^. v. Nannie", vi. Claiborne.". 



216 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES, 

Jane^DujMi/, m. Nicholas Edmunds, (p. 185). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . vii. Lavalette^, m. Samuel Morton, husband of 

her deceased sister Belle. Issue: 
Morton. (j) Davis^. (ii) Joseph^, (iii) Emma Belled 

(iv) Lizzie'^, (v) Lavalette'^. 
munds. viii. Ashby*. 

IV. John Dupuy^Edmunds, b., in Charlotte Co., 
Va., Sept., 1815; Settled on land adjoining the 
homestead, where he died, 1894; Long an Elder in 
Bethlehem Presbyterian church ; m., 1849, Mary N. 
Head. Issue : 

i. Lizzie Read^, m., 1887, Stanhope S. Hart, of 
Pittsylvania Co., Va. No issue., ii. Sallie E^., 
d., 1902; m., 1877, Benjamin C. Friend. Issue 
severaF. iii. Alice L^. iv. Jennie^; d., 1890. 
V. John R^. vi. Minnie A^. 

V. Sallie E^ Edmunds (Twin), b., in Charlotte 
Co., Va., July, 1817; m., June 8, 1848, Henry E. 
Scott; d. Dec. 14, 1882. Settled near Bethlehem 
Presbyterian Church, of which he was long an 
Elder. Issue : 

Scott. i. Jane*', b. Feb. 17, 1850; m. Henry Franke, a 

Photographer; d., . Issue: (i) Florence'^. 

(ii) Hallie^. 

ii. Clarissa^, b. Sept. 20, 1851 ; d., 1899. 
iii. Sallie E^, b. Jan. 3, 1854; d. Oct. 22, 1907; 
m. Nov 27, 1878, Rev. John A. McMurray, of 
North Carolina; (Davidson College, N. C, B. A., 
1871; Union Theological Seminary, Va., 1877; 
Licensed, Apr., 1877; Ordained, Oct., 1877; by 
the Presbytery of Central Texas ; Pastor of Cor- 
sicana, Tex. 1877-80; Evangelist of the Presby- 
tery of Central Texas, 1880-85, of Roanoke Pres- 
bytery, Va., 1885-86; Pastor of Roanoke church, 
Charlotte Co., Va., 1886-92; Evangelist of 
Fayetteville Presbytery, N. C. ., 1892; Pastor 
of Philadelphia, Robinson and Bethlehem 
churches, N. C.) Issue: Six'^. 
iv. Susan^, b. Mar. 8, 1856; m. R. H. Roberts. 



LINE OF PETER- DUPUY. 217 

Jane'^Dupuy, m. Nicholas Edmunds, (p. 185). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. V. Nannie*^, b. July 14, 1859; m. Thomas Gar- 
^^^ nett. Issue: Eiglit^. 

munds. VI, Susan^Edmunds (Twin), b., in Charlotte 
Co., Va., July, 1817; m., 1840, Patrick Henry 
Flournov, M. D., b., in Prince Edward Co., Va., 
Mar. 4, isiS; d. Charlotte C. H., Va., Mar. 3, 1887; 
[Philadelphia College of Physicians and Surgeons; 
Located at Charlotte C. H., Va., and did a large 
practice until his death; He descended from Lau- 
rent Flournoy (married Gabrielle Mellin, of 
Lyons), who fled from Champagne, France, after 
the massacre of the Protestants at Vassy, 1562, 
and went to Geneva at the time of the massacre of 
Saint Bartholomew's Day, 1572, The descendants 
of Dr. Flournoy, who know his immediate ancestry, 
(unknown to the author), will find sufficient infor- 
mation to trace his descent from pp. 81-90, of "The 
Virginia Magazine", Richmond, Va,, Vol. 2., No. 1., 
July, 1894], Issue: 
Flournoy. i. Nicholas Edmunds^ ; Volunteer in C. S. A. ; 
Many years, a Druggist at Charlotte C. H., Va., 
b. Mar. 23, 1841 ; m. Catherine P. Wood. Issue : 
(i) Ann Eliza^ (ii) Patrick W^.. (iii) Wal- 
ter N^. d. . (iv) Henry CabelF, 



J 



(v) Nicholas^, (vi) Kate^. (vii) Gertrude^ 
(viii) Melvin'^. 
ii. William Stanhope®; Volunteer in the C. S. 
A. when 171/4 yrs. old, and served to the close 
of the war ; Dentist at Charlotte C. H., Va. ; b. 
Dec. 23, 1845; m., 1871, Bettie A. Wilson. Issue: 
(i) Bessie B^. (ii) Helen^. (iii) Mary^. (iv) 
Isabell C^. 

iii. Ann CabelP, b, and d., 1848. 
munds Yll. Jane Watkins-'Edmunds, b., in Charlotte, 
' Co., Va., 1821; d., 1858; m. Peyton R. Berkely, M. 
D., of Prince Edward Co., Va. No. issue. 

VIII. Nannie W^. Edmunds, never married; b. 
Charlotte Co., Va., Aug. 21, 1828; d. Oct. 12, 1906. 



Ed- 



218 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Jane^Dupuy, m. Nicholas Edmunds, (p. 185). 
Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. IX. Nicholas^Edmunds ; For many years a Com- 
Ed- mission Merchant of Richmond, Va., where he died 
munds. without marrying. 

Mary^Dupuy, m. Col. WiUiam T. Walker, (p. 185). 

Issue : 

Walker. j^ Frances'^Walker. II. Sarah Watkins^ Walker ; 
d. Aug. 8, 1864; m. Col. Joseph^Dupuy, (p. 189). 

III. Elizabeth^Walker. IV. Judith Townes' 
Walker, m. Robert Watkins. 

V. Mary Dupuy^ Walker ; d. Jan., 1882; m. Sam- 
uel Clark; d., 1897. Issue: 
Clark. i. William Townes'' ; Never married, ii. John 
Walker^, m. Sallie . Issue : Two sons'^. 

Walker. VI. William Townes^Walker, M. D.; Hampden- 
Sidney College, Va., B. A., 1846 ; Jefferson Medical 
College, Philadelphia, Pa., 1852; Began practise of 
Medicine in his native county, about Darlington 
heights, and managed his father's estate; After 
marriage, he moved to his father-in-law's residence, 
on the famous "Dover Farm" on James river, 
Goochland Co., Va., where he practised his profes- 
sion, and managed the large farm about 30 years; 
Vice President and declined the Presidency of the 
Virginia Agricultural Society; Provisional Surgeon 
in the C. S. A., and established a general Hospital 
at the Huguenot Springs, Powhatan Co., Va., over 
which he presided during the Civil War ; After the 
war, he found himself stripped of every thing ex- 
cept the landed estate of his father-in-law, with 
180,000 of debt, arising from the provisions of his 
father-in-law's will; Under such financial burden, 
he struggled manfully for years, not failing to use 
his influence by public speeches and news-paper 
articles towards the recuperation of his impover- 
ished State; Advocated the abandonment of the 
Kanahwa Canal, and building on its towpath the 
Richmond and Allegheney R. R. (now the James 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 219 

Mary'^Dupuy, m. Col. William T. Walker, (p. 185). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. River Division of the Chesapeake and Ohio R. R.) ; 

Walker. Surgeon of the Chesapeake and Ohio R. R. ; In 1882, 
he sold the large estate in Goochland county and 
moved to Lynchburg Va., where he practised medi- 
cine till his death; Many years an Elder in the 
Presbyterian Church; b., in Prince Edward Co., 
Va., Aug. 22, 1825; d., Lynchburg, Va., May 13, 
1898 ; m. 1st., Oct. 26, 1852, Susan Josephine Samp- 
son, b., 1827; d., Goochland Co., Va., Sept. 23, 1870; 
(Daughter of Richard Sampson, who purchased, 
of the Woodsons, the famous "Dover Farm" in 
Goochland Co., Va., about 3 miles from the old 

obliterated site of Manakintown) Below. 

m. 2d. May 25, 1875, Mrs. Fannie (Hollaway) 
Bayly Page, 221 

VII. Susan Agnes^Walker, m. Dr. Henry A*. 
Watkins, of Pittsylvania Co., Va., (p. 200). 

VIII. John Edmunds^Walker. IX. Nannie Wat- 
kins^Walker. 

Dr. William T.^ Walker, m. 1st. Susan J. Sampson, 

(above). Issue: 

I. Lelia^Walker, b., in Goochland Co., Va., Nov. 
17, 1853. 

II. Frank^Walker, b., in Goochland Co., Va,, 
Nov. 28, 1854; m. Mrs. Maria J. Smith. Issue: 
Several, 

III. Richard Sampson^Walker, b., in Goochland 
Co., Va., Feb. 8, 1858; m. Dec. 19, 1883, Maude M. 
Miller, b. July 12, 1863. Issue: i. Maude Miller, 

b. Oct. 6, 1885. 

ii. Josephine Sampson^, b. June 27, 1887; d. 
Aug. 5, 1888. iii. Richard Sampson^, b. July 1, 
1888. iv. Guv Miller" b. IMay 26, 1890; d. Sept. 
9, 1890. V. Elizabeth Knight^ b. Aug. 5, 1891. 
vi. William Townes", b. May 29, 1893. vii. 
Blanche Miller^ b. Apr. 3, 1895. 



220 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Dr. William T.^ Walker, m. 1st. Susan J. Sampson, 
(p. 219). Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. IV. Josephine Sampson^Walker, b., in Goochland 
Walker. Co., Va., Oct. 29, 1861. 

V. Mary Susan^ Walker, b., in Goochland Co., 
Va., Oct. 20, 1862; m., Lynchburg, Va., July 3, 1888, 
Rev. Nicholas Hill Robertson (Methodist), b., Bed- 
ford Co., Va., Sept. 17, 1860; (Son of Nicholas W. 
and Sallie E. Robertson ; Randolph Macon College, 
Va., A. M., 1883 ; Licensed, 1885 ; West End, Man- 
chester, Va., 1885; Chatham Circuit, 1886-88; South 
Dan, 1888-89; Charles City, Lancaster, Franklin, 
Norfolk, and Prospect Circuits, severally, 1888- 
Robert- 1902). Issue: 
son. i. Fannied ii. William Walker^ b., 1890. iii. 

Annie Belief b. Aug. 14, 1892. 

iv. Nicholas HilF, b. Sept. 23, 1894. 
Walker. VI. Rev. William To wnes^ Walker; Hampden- 
Sidney College, Va., 1888 ; Union Theological Sem- 
inary, Va; Licensed, Apr., 1890; Ordained by the 
Presbytery of Montgomery, 1890; Stated Supply, 
3rd. Church, Lynchburg, Va., 1 yr., of Hampton, 
Va., 2 1-2 yrs. ; Evangelist of Nut Bush, Shiloh, Oak 
Hill, Grassy Creek, and Geneva, N. C. ; Pastor of 
Ashpole, N. C, 1901- ; b., in Goochland Co., Va., 
Oct. 7, 1865 ; m., Oct. 29, 1891, Mary Kenna Stokes 
of Prince Edward Co., Va., b., Oct. 15, 1867; d., 
Rowland, N. C, Dec. 27, 1902; (Daughter of Capt. 
Richard and S. J. Stokes of Prince Edward Co., 
Va. ) . Issue : 

i. Sarah Stokes^, b., Lynchburg, Va., Sept. 4, 

1895 ; d.. Prince Edward Co., Va., Nov. 2, 1896. 

ii. Frances Rives^ b., Lynchburg, Va., Mar. 5, 

1897; d., Oxford, N. C, June 3, 1898. 

iii. Mary Kenna^, b., Nov. 23, 1898. 
VII. John^Walker, M. D.; University of Vir- 
ginia; Maryland University, M. D., 1891; John 
Hopkins and Maryland Universities, post-graduate, 
1897; Began practice of Medicine in Lynchburg, 
Va., 1891 ; Member of The Virginia State Medical 



LINE OF PETERiDUPUY. 221 

Dr. William T.^Walker, m, 1st. Susan J. Sampson, 
(p. 219). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. Society, and Secretary of The Lynchburg Academy 
i^aXkQx. ^^ Medicine; Medical Examiner of The New York 
Life Insurance Co., of the Fidelity Mutual Life of 
New York, and of the Mutual Benefit of Newark, 
N. J. ; Surgeon of the Chesapeake and Ohio R. R. ; 
Coroner of the city of Lynchburg, Va; b., in Gooch- 
land Co., Va., July 1, 1867; m., Nov. 29, 1905, Laura 
May Stebbins, of South Boston, Va. 

VIII. Robert^Walker, b. and d. in Goochland 
Co., Va., respectively. May 8, 1869, July 11, 1869. 
Issue of Dr. W. T^ by his 2d. m. 

IX. Gulielna^Walker, b., Goochland Co., Va., 
Jan. 25, 1880; m., Lynchburg, Va., Feb. 28, 1901, 
Richard L. Simpson, M. D. 

Frances A.^ Dupuy, m. John Daniel. (p. 185). Issue: 

Daniel. j^ Agnes^Daniel, d. in infancy. 

II. Joel Watkins^ Daniel; Hampden-Sidney Col- 
lege, Va. ; First Lieutenant in the Charlotte Coun- 
ty Cavalry, C. S. A., at the outbreak of the war, and 
took part in Gen. Garnett's West Virginia Cam- 
paign; In 1862, on account of failing eyesight, he 
was transferred to the quarter-master's department, 
in which he served to the close of the war ; after the 
war, farmed in Charlotte Co., Va., and in Gooch- 
land Co., Va. ; Late in life, moved to Martinsville, 
Va. ; b. Oct. 12, 1822; d., Martinsville, Va., June 23, 
1905; m. 1st., Nov. 10, 1852, Alice Willie Harper, 
of Prince Edward Co., Va. ; d.. Prince Edward Co., 
Va., Aug. 19, 1858 ; m. 2d., June 20, 1860, Martha 
Elizabeth^Dupuy, (p. 225). Issue by 1st. m. 

i. John Harper^, b.. Prince Edward Co., Va., 
Oct. 29, 1853; d. Oct. 16, 1860. ii. Sarah Ander- 
son^, b.. Prince Edward Co., Va., Sept. 8, 1857; 
Topping. ^ j^,]^ 7^ Iggg. „^^ |^g(, 7^ 1§§0^ ;N p Topplnq. 

Issue: (i) Nathaniel Blunt^ b. Jan. 10, 1882. 
(ii) Harper Daniel^ b. June 7, 1885. (iii) 
Kuth^ b. Dec. 17, 1887. ; Issue hy 2d. m : 



222 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Daniel. 



Frances A.^Dwpuy, m. John Daniel, (p. 185). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. iii. Joel Watkins^, b., Charlotte Co., Va., Jan. 7, 
1862; Killed in a Rail Road wreck in W. Va., 
Oct. 25, 1905; m., Nov. 6, 1895, Caroline De Jar- 
nette Staples, of Roanoke, Va. Issue: 

(i) Child^ b. and d. Oct. 9, 1896. (ii) Hulda 

Caroline^ b. Mar. 14, 1898. 
iv. Paulina Pocahontas^, b., Charlotte Co., Va., 
Aug. 14, 1863 ; m. Nov. 19, 1890, Samuel A. An- 
derson, b. Apr. 8, 1850 ; ( Son of Rev. Robert C. 
Anderson, of Martinsville, Va. ; Lawyer in Rich- 
mond, Va.) Issue: (i) Pauline DanieF, b. May 

6, 1894. (ii) Samuel A'., b. Au<r. 29, 1897. 

(iii) Lavillon Dupuy^ b. Sept. 6, 1899. 
V. Powhatan Dupuy^, b., Charlotte Co., Va., 
Mar. 30, 1865. 

vi. Robert Eldridge^, b. Apr. 9, 1868; m., June 
27, 1893, Gertrude Russell. Issue : 

(i) Gertrude Sherron^ b. Sept. 18, 1897. 
vii. Lavillon Dupuy^ b. Feb. 12, 1877. 

William Hunf^Dupuy, m. Agnes Payne Ware, (p. 

185). Issue: 



Ander- 
son. 



Daniel. 



Dupuy. 



Richard- 
son. 

Williams. 



Richard- 
son. 

Smith. 



I. Mary Ware^Dupuy, b. Feb. 4, 1821; d., Bran- 
don, Miss., Oct. 20, 1887; m., Nov. 22, 1837, William 
Harrison Richardson, b. June 1, 1815 ; d., Brandon, 
Miss., Jan. 23, 1882. Issue : 

i. Agnes Ware^ b. Nov. 24, 1838; d. Julv 19, 
1896; m., Nov. 14, 1860, Edward G. Williams. 
Issue : 
(i) Bonnie BelF, b. Aug. 6, 1863; d. Aug. 11, 
1893. (ii) Annie Richardson^ b. Oct. 6, 1864; 
d. Aug. 6, 1893. (iii) Carrie Shelby^ b., 1866 ; 
d. Sept. 2, 1894 ; m. Prof. Ires, 
ii. Belle^ b. Feb. 22, 1840; m.. May 13, 1858, 
Wesley Marion Smith. Issue: 
(i) Mattie T^., b. Dec. 13, 1862; d. Sept. 9, 
1873. (ii) William M^, b. Nov. 24, 1867; d. 
Sept. 5, 1873. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 223 

William Hunt^Dupuy , m. Agnes Payne Ware, (p. 
185). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. iii. Loulie% b. Apr. 2, 1847; d. Apr. 28, 1886; m,, 

^^son'^^ Mar. 24, 1864, Henry Upshire McKinney. Issue: 

Mc- (i) Mary Sue^, m. A. G. Stollefiioerch. Issue: 

Kinney. 1. Florence McKinney^, b., 1894. 2. Mary 

weich!" Augusta^, b., 1897. 

Mc. (ii) William Richardson'^, m. Susie Hernan- 

Kinney. dies, (iii) Florence L"^. (iv) Howard"^. 

Richard- iv. Annie Eliza^, b. July 27, 1850; d. Nov. 1, 

so°- 1856. V. Josephine A^., b. Nov. 30, 1852 ; d. Nov. 

5, 1856. vi. Charles Dupuy% b. Aug. 13, 1855; 

d. Apr. 28, 1872. vii. Jennie Lee% b. Jan. 11, 

1858; d. June 13, 1894; m., Nov. 7, 1883, James 

Ed. Martin. Issue: 

Martin. (i) Wesley M^., b. Apr. 5, 1890. (ii) William 

Richardson^ b., 1891 ; d. Aug. 20, 1892. 
Dupuy. II. John Ware^Dupuy, b. Sept. 13, 1822 ; d., Ow- 
ensboro, Ky., Feb. 24, 1883; m. Elizabeth Alice 
Withers. Issue : 

i. William Elijah^, M. D., m. Cornelia A. Lef- 
fler. Issue : 
(i) Louis Rogers; Volunteer in the Spanish- 
American War; b., 1871. 
ii. Leonella Catharine®, m. John Anderson 

Faulds ; d. . 

iii. Agnes Josephine®. Never married. 

III. William Hunt^Dupuy, b. Sept. 17, 1824; d., 
1858; m. Mary V. Burnett. No issue. 

IV. Susan Payne^Dupuy, b. Sept. 2, 1826; m., 
Jan. 22, 1852, Alexander C. Faulkner; They moved 
from Kentucky, and settled in Texas in 1853. Issue : 

Faulk- i- Fannie Agnes®, b. Nov. 16, 1855; m., Oct 3, 
ner. 1872, Rev. William Mason Gough (Baptist), 

b. May 22, 1840; d. Oct. 21, 1895. Issue: 
Gough. (i) Alexander Bailev^ b. Sept. 17, 1873. (ii) 

William Dupuv', b. Julv 25, 1875. (iii) Ella 
Trolinge^^ b. Jan. 18, 1877. (iv) Daisv Anna^ 
b. ]\ray 18, 1878; m., Oct. 20, 1808, Chas S. 
Hefley. (v) Lulu Cass', b. Nov. 26, 1880. (vi) 



224 GENEALOGY WITH BKIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. II I. 
Gough. 



Faulk 
ner. 



Cass. 



William Eunt*Dupuy, m. Agnes Payne Ware, (p. 
185). Issue — Continued: 

Fannie Fanlkner^ b. Dec. 24, 1882. (vii) Archi- 
bald Leonard^, b. June 27, 1884. (viii) Jesse 
Nash^, b. May 31, 1886. (ix) Chas. Spurgeon% 
b. Aug. 14, 1890; d. Dec. 14, 1890. (x) Ruth^, 
b. Apr. 19, 1892; d. Feb. 12, 1906. 
ii. Mary Lula% b. Aug. 7, 1859 ; m., Jan. 9, 1877, 
Nathaniel Cass, M. D., b. Sept. 26, 1848; d., 1906. 
Issue * 
(!) Jesse Lee^ M. D., b. Jan. 27, 1878. (11) 
Walter^ b. Mar. 5, 1880; d. June 5, 1880. (iii) 
Elmo^ b. Apr. 15, 1883; d. Nov. 4, 1885. (iv) 
Susie^ b. Nov. 10, 1884; d. Oct. 10, 1885. (v) 
Nathaniel', b. Dec. 6, 1886. (vi) Mary Lula^ 
b. Jan. 20, 1888. (vii) Annie^ b. Oct. 19, 1890; 
d. Oct. 25, 1890. (viii) Moty Dupuy^ b. Aug. 
15, 1897. 

iii. Richard C^, b. Jan. 24, 1863; m., Oct. 21, 

1888, Jerusha P. Rogers, b. Sept. 29, 1867. Issue: 

(i) Edgar Lee^ b. Feb. 24, 1890. (ii) Clara^ 

b. Dec. 14, 1891. (iii) Ruth', b. Feb. 12, 1894. 

(iv) William Alexander^ b. July 17, 1896. 

Dupuy. V. Robert JoePDupuy, b. Oct. 17, 1828; d., 1858. 

Never married. 

VI. James^ Dupuy. 

VII. Agnes Morton^Dupuy, b. Apr. 13, 1839; m., 
Dec. 1, 1857, Benjamin Lawrence Radford, b. Sept. 
26, 1828 ; d. Sept. 29, 1873. Issue : 

Radford. i. Sarah Agnes% b. Sept. 16, 1859; d. July 28, 
1862. ii. William Dupuy^, b. Apr. 16, 1863 ; d. 
Oct. 21, 1867. iii. Reuben Lee% b. Aug. 26, 1866; 
m. Dec. 4, 1895, Eliza D. Posey, iv. Robert 
Morton*^, b. Mar. 1, 1869. v. Mary Charles^ b. 
Nov. 15, 1872. 

JolinWnpuy, m. Ann B. Daniel, (p. 185). Issue: 

Dupuy. L John Beverly^Dupuy ; Killed, May 3, 1863, in 
C. S. A., at the battle of Chancellorsville, Va, 
II. Charles^ Dupuy. III. Susan Watkins^Dupuy. 



Faulk 
ner. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 225 

John^Dupuy, m. Ann B. Daniel, (p. 1S5). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. IV. Nannie E.^Dupuy; m. Rev. Edwin Lindsley 
Dupuy. Wilso7i, h., in Berkeley Co. Va. ; ( Hampden-Sidney 
College, Va., A. B., 1869; Union Theological Sem- 
inary, Va., 1872 ; Licensed, Mar. 13, 1872 ; Ordained, 
Oct. 12, 1872 ; Pastor of Falling Water, Va., 1872, 
of Hancock, Md., 1872-74, of Gerardstown, W. Va., 
1874-93, and of Catoctin, Va., 1893- ). Issue: 
Wilson. i, Edwin Graham^, m. Keightly Timberlake. ii. 
Louis F^. iii. Philip Lindsley^. iv. Anna Mary^. 
V. Lavalette Dupuy^. 
Dupuy. V. Mary Walker^Dupuy; m., Apr. 29, 1874, John 

Zackary Holladay. Issue : 
HoUaday. i, John Zackary^, b. Feb. 5, 1875; m. June 12, 
1901, Alice Gordon Sampson, b. Nov. 16, 1881; 
d. May 6, 1902. Issue: (i) Alice Gordon Ramp- 
son'^, b. Apr. 28, 1902. ii. Lewis Littlepage®, b. 
Oct. 13, 1876. iii. Jean Thompson*"', b. Jan. 25, 
1879; m. June 25, 1901, Amacy Webb Minor, b. 
May 3, 1878. iv. l)upuy% b. Aug. 17, 1880. v. 
Edwin Wilson^ b. Aug. 24, 1883.' vi. Mary Du- 
puy«, b. July 24, 1889. 
Dupuy. VI. James Richard^Dupuy, m. . Issue: Sev- 
eral. 

Dr. Joel W.^Dupuy, m. Paulina P. Eldridge, (p. 

185). Issue: 

Dupuy. I. Martha Elizabeth^ Dupuy, b., Prince Edward 
Co., Va., Apr. 5, 1834; m. Joel W.^Daniel (his 2d. 
wife), of Charlotte Co., Va., (p. 221). 

II. Joseph Thomas^ Dupuy, M. D. ; Philadel- 
phia College of Physicians and Surgeons; Practised 
Medicine in Prince Edward Co., Va., about Dar- 
lington Heights and Pamplin City, in Cumberland 
Co., Va., about Cartersville, in Kempsville, Va., later 
in Powliatan Co., Va. ; b.. Prince Edward Co., Va., 
Aug. 30, 1835; m. 1st. Mollie Madison, of Charlotte 
Co., Va., b., 1835; d. Dec. 5, 1891; m. 2d., Jan. 11, 



226 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Dr, Joel W.^Dupuy, m. Paulina P. Eldridge, (p. 

185). Issue — Continued: 

C hap, m . 1893, Blanch L. Herndon, b. May 29, 1867. Issue 
Dupuy. by 1st m : 

i. Flood Edmunds^, b. Oct. 17, 1862; m. Mar. 23, 

1892, Ethel Crockette. Issue: 

(i) Nannie Madison^ b. Dec. 23, 1892. (ii) 
Eva Crockette^ b. Nov., 1894. 
ii. Joseph Thomas^, b. July 4, 1864; m. Nov. 9, 

1893, Katherine Ford. Issue: 

(i) Katherine Fo^d^ b. Nov., 1894. (ii) Jo- 
sephine Edmunds'^, b. Apr. 1896. 
(iii) De Graffenreidt^ b., 1898. 
iii. Susie Madison^, b. Nov. 15, 1866. 
iv. Paulina Eldridge^, b. Mar. 23, 1869 ; m., June 
23, 1895, Charles D. Mears. Issue: 
Mears (^) Herbert Madison^ b. Nov. 22, 1897. 

V. Mary Janette^, b. Mar. 1, 1872; m. Aug. 23, 
i^upuy. ^gg^^ William Whitehurst. Issue: 

^.^^. (1) Mollie^ b. July 6, 1898. 

hurst. Issue of Dr. J. T^. by his 2d. m : 

Dunuv ^- C^il<i^j ^' at birth, vii. Raymond Herndon", 
^ ^' b. Dec. 26, 1897. 

III. Powhatan Eldridge^ Dupuy ; For many years 
a leading Druggist on Broad St., Richmond, Va. ; 
b., Prince Edward Co., Va., Sept. 10, 1838 ; d.. Rich- 
mond, Va., July 19, 1893 ; m., Feb. 7, 1866, Marietta 
Bruden, of Richmond, Va., b. Mar. 17, 1842. No 
issue. 

IV. John HowelPDupuy; Lieutenant and Adju- 
tant in the 23rd Regiment of Virginia Infantry, 
C. S. A. ; b.. Prince Edward Co., Va. ; Killed at the 
battle of Chancellorsville, Va., May 3, 1863. 

V. Paulina Pocahontas^ Dupuy, b., Prince Ed- 
ward Co., Va., Oct. 6, 1841; d.. South Boston, Va., 
Oct. 16, 1897; m., "Falkland," Goochland Co., Va., 
Aug. 6, 1873, Rev. Lewis Burwell Johnston, b., Sa- 
lem, Va.,Dec. 26, 1847; d., June 8, 1907; (Hampden- 
Sidney College, Va., B. A,, 1868; Union Theological 
Seminary, Va., 1871 ; Licensed, May 22, 1871, by the 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 



227 



Dr. Joel W^Dupuy, m. Pauline P. Eldridge (p. 

ISo). Issue — Continued : 

C hap. II I. Presbytery of Montgomery; Ordained, Aug. 20, 
Johnston. 1871, by the Presbytery of West Hanover ; Pastor of 
Byrd and Hebron, Goochland Co., Va., 1871-80, of 
Gordonsville and Orange C. H., Va., 1883-84, of 
Hebron. Va., 1884-87, of Harrisonburg, Va., 1887- 
92, of South Boston, Va., 1892-1907; Member of 
Board of Trustees, Union Theological Seminary, 
Va. ; D. D. ) Issue : 

i. Carter Dupuy®, b. May 22, 1874; appointed 
Assistant Attorney General of the Philippines, 
1906. ii. Prentiss Dupuy% M. D., b. Mar. 27, 
1878; m., Lexington, Va., Sept. 10, 1907, Nancy 
M. Spencer, iii. Lewis Dupuy^, b. Aug. 6. 1881. 
Dupuy. VI. Josephine^Dupuy, d. in infancy. 

VII. Henry Rolfe^Dupuy, M. D. ; attended Medi- 
cal Lectures in the West ; Practised Medicine about 
Cartersville, Cumberland Co., Va., and later in 
Norfolk, Va., where he built up a fine practice; b., 
Prince Edward Co., Va., 1845; m. Nannie Grayson 
Walton, of Cumberland Co., Va. Issue; 

i. Minnie P^., b., 1869 ; m. Charles T. Ironmon- 
ger. Issue : 
Iron- (i) Mary Greyson^, b., 1894. (ii) Nannie 

monger. Cortlandt"^, b., 1896. 

Dupuy. ii. Nannie Cortlandt^, b., 1871 ; m. Edmund Fos- 
ter, of Boston, Mass. iii. Rolfe Walton^, b., 
1873; m. Lulie R. Walker, of Kentucky, iv. 
Howell Eldridge^ b., 1875. 

VIII. Ella Nash^Dupuy, b., Prince Edward Co., 
• Va., Feb. 16, 1851. Unmarried. 

IX. Joel Watkins^ Dupuy, b.. Prince Edward Co., 
Va., Feb. 2, 1849; Moved to Mississippi; m.. Mar. 
31, 1878, Martha Watkins Ryals, of Mississippi, b. 
June 19, 1856. Issue: 

1. Howell Eldridge«, b. Aug. 22, 1879; m., Dec. 
1902, Beulah Smith; (Daughter of N. L. Smith, 
of Yazos Co., ^Miss.). Issue: (i) Son^, b. Sept. 
1903. 






228 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Dr. Joel WJDupuy, m. Pauline P. Eldridge (p. 
185). Issue — Continued: 

C hap, m . ii. Lucy Gordon", b. Sept. 18, 1882. iii. Joel 
Dupuy. Watkins«, b. July 17, 1884; d. Sept. 6. 1888. 

X. Alice Townes^Dupuy, b.. Prince Edward Co., 
Va., Oct. 3, 1853; m., Byrd church, Goochland Co., 
Va., Oct. 7, 1879, William C. Kean, of Goochland 
Co., Va. ; d., 1903. ( Member of the First Richmond 
Howitzers, CabeH's Battalion of Artillery, Lon.oj- 
street's Corps, C. S. A., and served to the close of 
the war). Issue: 
Kean. i. Nellie Pocahontas^ b. Sept. 24, 1880, 

ii. Leonora Lavinia^, b. Sept. 30, 1882, all 

iii. Otho Tecumseh", b. Dec. 17, 1886, 
at "Oakland," Goochland Co., Va. 

Mary P.^Diipuy, m. Robert Dickinson, (p. ISS). 

Issue : 

Dickin- 
son. I. Mary Anne^ Dickinson, m. 1st. John Archer 

Bland; m. 2d., Pergerson. Issue by 1st. m. : 

Bland. i- Martha Rebecca*^, m. Charles W. Fitzgeral. 

ii. Robert^, iii. Cornelia Ann^, m. .John H. 
Dickin- Knight. Issue several, iv. Mary Elizabeth'^, 
son. II. Thomas H.^Dickinson; moved to California 
and died. Never married. 

III. James Robert^ Dickinson, M. D. ; moved to 
Alabama in 1838 ; d. there. 

IV. Asa Dupuy° Dickinson; Lawyer, and lo- 
cated near Worsham, Va. ; Practised law in the 
counties of Prince Edward, Cumberland, Lunen- 
burg, Va. ; Member of the House of Representatives 
from Prince Edward Co., Va., 1857-59 ; Member of 
the Virginia Senate, 1860-63; Judge of the Third 
Virginia Circuit, 1870-82; Trustee of Hampden- 
Sidney College, Va., 1844-82 ; Long an Elder in the 
Presbyterian Church; b., Nottoway Co., Va., Mar. 
31, 1816; d..June, 1882; m. 1st. Jane Michaux, (a 
descendant of Abraham Michaux, immigrant from 
Sedan, France, and of Susanna Rochett, the famous 
"Little Night-cap," who escaped from Sedan, in a 



LINE OF PETEK'DUPUY. 229 

Mary P.^Dupuy, m. Robert Dicldnson, (p. 18S). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. hogshead to Holland, where they were married and 
Dickin- remained some years. They emigrated to America 
son. and settled in King William Parish; His will is 
probated in Henrico county court, July, 1717, with 
the following legatees — Wife, Jacob, John, Paul, 
Abraham, Anne, Jane, Magdalene, Susanna, Ju- 
dith, Elizabeth, Amanda, and Esther; Jacob mar- 
ried Judith Woodson and had four children — Jacob, 
Joseph, Elizabeth and Judith, and from this last 
Jacob, grandson of the immigrant, are descended all 
who bear the Michaux name in Virginia) ; m. 2d., 
Nov. 25, 1846, Sarah Cabell Irvine, b. Oct. 17, 1825. 
Issue by 1st m : 

i. Robert M^. ; Lawyer in Prince Edward Co., 

Va; m. Cralle. 

ii. John Purueir^ ; d. Jan. 2, 1886. Never mar- 
ried. Issue by 2d. m: 
iii. Jesse Irvine^ ; moved to Texas, 
iv. Clement CabelP; Lawyer in Missouri; m. 
Mattie Parks; (Daughter of Judg. Parks of Mis- 
souri. Issue: (i) Clement Parks'^, (ii) Mary 
CabelF. (iii) Pey^on^ (girl). 
V. Thomas Harris^ b. Feb. 13, 1851 ; m. Nov. 27, 
1895, Mildred S. Watkins, (p. 231). vi. Eliza- 
beth Guerrant*^. vii. Anna Carrington^. viii. 
Frances Jane^ ; d. young, ix. Frank Watkins" ; 
d. young, x. Asa Dupuy^ ; Moved to Texas ; m. 
Ella Duncan. Issue: 
(i) Robert Carrington^. (ii) Asa Dupuy^. 
(iii) Chloe'^. (iv) Sallie Irvine*^, 
xi. Sallie Bruce^. 

xii. Mary Seddon®, m. Rev. J. Horace Lacij, b., 
Lexington, Va. ; (University of Virginia, 2 yrs; 
Union Theological Seminary, Va., 1889; Or- 
dained, May, 1889, by the Presbytery of Orange ; 
Pastor of Mebane, N. C, 1889-91, of Westmin- 
ster Church, N. C, 1891-93, of Florence, Ala., 



230 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 



Chap. III. 



Lacy. 



Dickin- 
son. 



Alex- 
ander. 

Dickin- 
son. 



Knight. 



Mary P.^Dupuy, m. Robert Dicldnson, (p. 188). 
Issue — Continued : 

1893-99, of Clarksville, Tenn., 1900-05, Win- 
chester, Va., 1905 ; D. D. ) . Issue : 

(i) James Horace''', (ii) Margaret Graham''', 
(iii) Moses Hoge^, b., Florence, Ala., Mar. 1, 
1895; d., Clarksville, Tenn., Sept. 15, 1902. 
xiii. Charles Bruce®; d. young, 
xiv. Juliet Massie®, m. Rev. William Clawson 
Alexander, b., Chester, S. C. ; (Military Acad- 
emy, S. C. ; Union Theological Seminary, Va. ; 
Ordained, Sept. 13, 1888, by the Presbytery of 
Memphis; Pastor of Boliver, Tenn., 1888-92, of 
Mt. Airy, N. C, and Evangelist of the Synod of 
North Carolina, 1892-94 ; Pastor of Concord, N. 
C, 1894-99, of Maryland Avenue ch., Baltimore, 
Md., 1900-03, of Idlewild ch., Memphis, Tenn., 

1903 ). Issue: 

(i) Sallie CabelF. (ii) Juliet Dickinson^, 
(iii) William C^ 
V. Elizabeth Guerrant^Dickinson; d. Sept. 1, 
1849 ; m.. May, 1840, Col. William Carter Knight; 
[Son of John Howell and Sallie E. (Carter) 
Knight, a direct descendant in the third generation 
of George Walton, signer of the Declaration of 
Independence; Graduate of law from William and 
Mary College, Va. ; Member of Virginia Senate, 
1857-60; Secretary and President of the State Ag- 
ricultural Society; Editor of the Southern Planter 
and Farmer; The name Knight appears early in 
Virginia history ; Many thousands of acres of land 
were patented by persons of that name, as shown 
in the State Registry, during the period, 1638-75.]. 
Issue : 

i. Carter Dupuy® ; d. young. 
ii. Robert P'^. ; Volunteer in the First Richmond 
Howitzers, Cabell's Battalion of Artillery, Long- 
street's Corps, C. S. A., and served to the close 
of the Civil War; m. Miss Clay, of Chesterfield 
Co., Va. Issue, a number of children. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 231 

Mary PJDupuy, m. Robert Dickinson, (p. ISS). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. II I. iii. Jinnie Wickliffe% m. 1st. Capt. Henry Dela- 
Knight. plaine Danforth; ( Member of the 21st. Virginia 
Infantry of Volunteers, C. S. A.; Secretary of 
the Mutual Assurance Society, Richmond, Va. ) ; 
m. 2d. Col. Charles T. O'Ferrall; (C. S. A.; 
Member of Congress). Issue by 1st. m: (i) 

Danforth. John B. 

Knight. iv. Emmit Carter^, m. Josephine Mayo. 
Dickin- VI. William PurnelP Dickinson, m. 1st. Laval- 
soo- ette Barksdale ; m. 2d. Maggie Venable ; m. 3rd. — 
Smith. Issue : 

i. Magdalene®, ii. Mary®, iii. Charles®, iv. 
Rosa®. V. Millie®. 
VII. Sarah Jane^Dickinson. 

Asa^Dupuy, m. Emily Howe, (p. 188). 

Issue: 

Dupuy. I. Mary PurnelP Dupuy, b.. Prince Edward Co., 

Va., June 23, 1839; m., Aug. 24, 1858, Richard 

Henry Watkins, b.. Prince Edward Co., Va., June 

4, 1825; d., Farmville, Va., July 8, 1905; (Captain 

of the Prince Edward County, Cavalry, C. S. A.; 

Successful Lawyer in Prince Edward Co., Va. ; For 

50 years an elder in the Presbyterian churches, first 

of Briery and later of Farmville, Va.). Issue: 

Watkins. i- Emily Dupuy®, b,. Prince Edward Co., Va., 

July 13, 1859 ; m. Edward Lawrence^Dupuy, (p. 

236). 

ii. Mildred Stuart®, b., Prince Edward Co., Va., 
Jan. 19, 1861; m. Thos. H. Dickinson, (p. 229). 
iii. Mary Purnell®, b.. Prince Edward Co., Va., 
May 13, 1863 ; d. Nov. 4, 1870. 
iv. Virginia®, b.. Prince Edward Co., Va., Dec. 
1, 1867 ; d. Sept 11, 1870. 

V. Rev. Asa Dupuy® ; Hampden-Sidney College, 
Va., B. A.; Harvard College, 1 year; Union 
Theological Seminary, Va., 1903; Stated Supply 
of Cass, W. Va., 1905; Pastor of Windsor Ave., 



232 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES 

Asa^Dupuy, m. Emily Howe, (p. 188). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. Bristol, Tenn. ; b., Prince Edward Co., Va., Mar. 

Dupuy. 1^? 1873. 

II. Maria Lucinda^ Dupuy, b., Prince Edward 
Co. Va., Apr. 3, 1841; m., Nov. 26, 1862, Abner 
Anderson; (Editor and Proprietor of "The Dan- 
ville Register and Richmond Whig"). No issue. 

III. Eliza Lavalette^ Dupuy, b., Prince Edward 
Co., Va., July 26, 1843; d. Dec. 4, 1880; m., Jan. 13, 
1875, Howson White Cole, M. D., of Danville, Va. 
Issue : 

qqIq i. Howson White^, b., Danville, Va., June 13, 

1875. ii. Lavillon Dupuy^, b., Danville, Va., 
Nov. 19, 1880. 
Dupuy IV. Ann Lefevre^ Dupuy, b., Prince Edward Co., 
Va., Apr. 8, 1845 ; d. Nov. 9, 1879. 

V. Emily Howe^ Dupuy, b., Prince Edward Co., 
Va., Nov. 23, 1846; d. Dec. 5, 1856. 

Dr. Wm. J^. Dupuy, m. Jane S. Ruffin, (p. 188). 

Issue : 

I. Rebecca Cook^ Dupuy, b. Nov. 29, 1817; m. T. 
F. Epes (his 2d wife), b. Oct. 26, 1814; d. Feb. 
2, 1897. No issue. 

II. William PurnelPDupuy, b. Feb. 6, 1819; d. 
Sept. 26, 1829. 

III. George Ruffin^Dupuy; William and Mary 
College, Va., B. A. ; For many years a Tobacconist 
in Kentucky and Missouri; b. Dec. 17, 1820; d., 
Brunswick, Mo., Oct. 1, 1887 ; m. Sidney Thompson, 

. b. Jan. 15, 1842 ; d. Apr. 4, 1864. Issue : 

i. George Ruffin^; Davidson College, N. C, A. 
B., 1886; Book-keeper; b., Eddyville, Ky., Dec. 
18, 1862; m., Oct. 12, 1898, Annie E. Satter- 
thwaite, b., Washington, N. C, Apr. 17, 1871. 
Issue '. 
(i) Margarite Fowled b., 1899, (ii) George 
Ruffing b. Jan. 29, 1901 ; d. June 11, 1902. 
ii. Sidney Thompson^ ; Davidson College, N. C, 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 



233 



Dr. Wm. J^. Duimy, in. Jane S. Ruffin, (p. 188). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap.m. 1885; Tobacconist in Missouri and Kentucky; 

Dupuy. b., Eddyville, Ky., Apr. 2, 1864; m., Brunswick, 

Mo., Nov. 12, 1902. Julia Dorathy Harriss, b. 

Dec. 19, 1874 ; ( Daughter of J. W. and Julia A. 

Harriss, of Brunswick, Mo. ) . 

IV. John James^Dupuy, M. D. ; Philadelphia 

College; Surgeon in the C. S. A; Last Heir of the 

old French Sword; b. Dec. 14, 1822; d., Davidson, 

N. C, June 13, 1898; m. 1st. Jane Ruffin; m. 2d., 

June 7, 1865, Mary Sampson, b., 1841. Issue by 1st. m: 

i. Jane R^, b. Apr. 8, 1855; d. Aug. 12, 1864. 

Issue hy 2d m: 

ii. Carrie^, b. Sept. 26, 1867; d. May 30, 1870. 
iii. Frank Sampson*^ ; Engineer in the U. S. 
Army during the Spanish-American War; Sent 
to the Philippine Islands ; b. Sept. 5, 1869. 
iv. Alice Mirle^ b. Nov. 30, 1871; m., Jan. 2 
1900, Rev. Walter L. Lingle of Dalton, Ga., b. 
Mill Bridge, N C; (Davidson College, N. C, B 
A., 1892; M. A., 1893; Union Theological Sem 
inary, Va., 1896; University of Chicago, 1896 
Licensed, May, 1895; Ordained, Sept., 1897, by 
the Presbytery of Concord ; assistant Instructor 
in Hebrew and Greek, Union Theological Semi- 
nary, Va., 1896; Stated Supply of Gastonia, N. 
C, 1894, of Farmville, Va., 1895, of the Second 
church, Charlotte, N. C, 1897; Assistant In- 
structor of Mathematics, Davidson College, N. 
C, 1891-93; Pastor of Dalton, Ga., 1898-1902; 
Instructor, Union Theo. Seminarv, Va., 1900-01; 
Pastor of Rock Hill, N. C, 1902--07; of First At- 
lanta, Ga., 1907- ). Issue: 
Lingle. (i) Child'; d. at birth, (ii) Mary Sampson', 

b. Aug., 1903; d. Dec. 26, 1903. 
Dupuy. V. Julia Lorraine^, b. Dec. 20, 1873; m., Aug. 4, 
1896, Dr. H. L. Smith, b. July 28, 1859; (Presi- 
dent of Davidson College, N. C, 1901- ; Son of 
Rev. Jacob H. Smith, D. D.) Issue: 



234 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Chap. III. 
Smith. 

Dupuy. 



Dr. Wm. J^. Dupuy, m. Jane S. Rufjfin, (p. 188). 
Issue — Continued : 

(i) Jacob Henry ^ b. May 19, 1897. (ii) Helen 
Dupuy^ b. Mar. 11, 1899. 
vi. George Montgomery^, b. Mar. 20, 1876; d. 
Oct. 27, 1891. 

rm. Sept. 1904, 
Frank Brown. Is- 
sue: (i) Mary 



vii. Ella B«. 



\ b. Oct. 

viii. Thornton D«. /8, 1878. < ^^^H ^ 

Davidson C o 1 - 

lege, N. C, A. B., 

1900 ; Teacher. 

ix. Mary Marshall^ b. Aug. 14, 1880. 

X. Lavalette^ b. Jan. 28, 1883. xi. Jean Jacqui- 

line% b. July 15, 1887. 

V. Alexander^ Dupuy, b. June 7, 1825 ; d. Oct. 18, 
1829. 

VI. Albert Montgomery^Dupuy ; Military Engi- 
neer in C. S. A.; b. July 9, 1827; d. July 22, 1862; 
m. 1851, Louisa Coleman, b. Nov. 9, 1827; d. Feb. 
2, 1898. Issue : i. Louisa^ d. in childhood. 

VII. Mary Jane^Dupuy, b. May 1, 1829; d. Jan. 
19, 1880; m. Oct. 15, 1851, John H. Marshall, b. 
Nov. 9, 1829; d. Apr. 20, 1886. Issue: 

Marshall. i- John Dupuy«, b. Feb. 4, 1853; d. Apr. 28, 

1855. ii. William Montgomery^ b. Dec. 2, 1859. 
Dupuy. VIII. Julia Elizabeth^ Dupuy, b. July 10, 1832. 
IX. William Alexander^ Dupuy; Virginia Mili- 
tary Institute, Lexington, Va., B. A.; Member of 
Cavalry in the C. S. A; Tobacconist in Kentuclrs', 
Missouri, and Virginia; Elder in the Nottoway 
Presbyterian Church at Blackstone, Va. ; b. Oct. 18, 
1835; d.. Memorial Hospital, Richmond, Va., Jan. 
11, 1904 ; m. Aug. 27, 1878, Mary Beebe, of Bruns- 
wick, Mo., b. Nov. 19, 1858; (Daughter of a Presby- 
terian Minister). Issue: 

i. Edward Lorraine*', b., Brunswick, Mo., Nov. 

4, 1879. ii. Anna Rebecca*', b., Brunswick, Mo., 

Apr. 7, 1883. 



LINE OF PETERS DUPUY. 235 

Dr. Wm. J^. Dupuy, m. Jane 8. Ruffin, (p. 188). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. X. Anna Wood^ Dupuy, b. May 16, 1839; m. 

Dupuy. Charles L. C.^Dupuy, (p. 191). 

Col. Joseph^Dupuy, m. Sarah W.^Walker, (p. 189). 

Issue : 

I. Mary Townes^ Dupuy, b.. Prince Edward Co., 
Va., Oct. 1, 1843. Never married. 

II. William PurnelPDupuy; ' Hampden- Sidney 
College, Va. ; Volunteer in the Prince Edward 
County Cavalry, C. S. A., 1863, and served to the 
close of the Civil War; Member, for three terms, 
of the Virgnia House of Representatives from 
Prince Edward county; Moved to Roanoke, Va., 
and for one term, representative from the counties 
of Roanoke and Craig; Appointed Post Master of 
the city of Roanoke, under President Cleveland's 
administration ; For years an Elder in the Presby- 
terian Church; b.. Prince Edward Co., Va., Apr. 7, 
1845; d., Roanoke, Va., July, 1904; m.. May 6, 1868, 
Nelia Booker. Issue: 

i. Louisa Booker^, b. Apr. 10, 1869 ; d. Julv 25, 
1873. ii. Joseph Eggleston«, b. Aug. 21, 1879. 
iii. Nannie Lefevre% b. June 22, 1882. iv. John 
Booker«, b. July 31, 1884. 
v. Nelia Purneip, b. July 29, 1886. 

III. Jane Nicholas^Dupuy, b.. Prince Edward 
Co., Va., Sept. 2, 1847. 

IV. Elvira^Dupuy, b.. Prince Edward Co., Va., 
Mar. 4, 1849; m., Oct. 9, 1889, Albert G. Jeffress; 
d. Sept. 4, 1893. No issue. 

V. Joseph^ Dupuy; Hampden-Sidney College, 
Va., B. A., 1872; Union Theological Seminary, Va., 
1873-74; Never Ordained on account of failing 
health; b., Prince Edward Co., Va., June 30, 1851; 
d. May 12, 1883 ; m.. May 15, 1879, Alice Bowyer. 
Issue : i. Alvin Bowyer*', b. Aug. 1, 1880. 

VI. Sarah Louisa^ Dupuv, b.. Prince Edward Co., 
Va., May 28, 1853; m., Oct. 1, 1874, George W. 



236 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Col. Joseph^Dupuy, m. Sarah W.^Walker, (p, 189). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. Redd. Issue: i. William Dupuy^ b., Aug. 2, 1875. 
Redd. ii. Emily Watkins% b. Aug. 9, 1877. 

iii. John Fennell«, b. May 23, 1880. iv. Asa 
Washington®, b. Jan. 8, 1882; d. Mar. 7, 1882. 
V. George Washington®, b. Mar. 5, 1886. 
Dupuy. VII. James Asa^Dupuy; Hampden-Sidney Col- 
lege, Va., 1879; Studied law under Prof. Minor of 
the University of Virginia; Began practice of law 
in Franklin Co., Va. ; Moved to Roanoke, Va., 1888; 
Elected Judge of the 18th Judicial Circuit Court, 
Mar., 1892, and served till Jan. 1, 1901, when he 
resumed practice of Law in Parkersburg, W. Va. ; 
b.. Prince Edward Co. Va., Aug. 3, 1856; m., Dec. 
2, 1885, Mary Vaughan, ( Daughter of Rev. Clement 
Read Vaughan, D. D., Presbyterian), d. Dec. 9, 
1889. Issue : i. Loulie Rochet®, b. Oct. 12, 1886. 

VIII. Edward Lawrence^Dupuy, b., Prince Ed- 
ward Co., Va., Feb. 1, 1859 ; m., Jan. 3, 1889, Emily 
Dupuy® Watkins (p. 231). Issue: i. Mary Purnell®, 

b. Nov. 22, 1889. 

ii. Richard Watkins®, b. Aug. 8, 1891. iii. Ed- 
ward Lawrence®, b. July 26, 1894. 

IX. Henry Watkins^ Dupuy, b.. Prince Edward 
Co., Va., Nov. 7, 1861; d. Feb. 28, 1894. 

James H.'^Dupuy, m.. EUzaheth C^Dupuy, (p. 189). 

Issue : 

I. Ann Eliza^Dupuy, b. Dec. 24, 1824; m. May 1, 
1867, Charles Welling. No issue. 

II. Mary E^ Dupuy, b. Nov. 7, 1826 ; m. 1st., Dec. 
1852, T. J. Trueheart; m. 2d., Rev. J. C. Berryman 
(Methodist), b. Feb. 14, 1810. No issue. 

IIL Virginia C.^Dupuy, b. Sept. 24, 1828; d., 

Farmington, Mo., July 21, 1901 ; m., Nov. 6, 1850, 

M. P. Cayce (his 2d. wife), b. June 15, 1804; d. 

Apr. 17, 1888. Issue: 
Cayce. ^ ^jj^^ je^ ^ g^p^ g^ ^gg^^ 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 237 

James H.^Dupuy, m. Elizabeth G^Dupuy, (p. 189). 
Issue — Contmu ed : 

Ch ap. II I. ii. Elizabeth Dupuy^, b. Feb. 12, 1854 ; m., Oct. 
C^. 16, 1879, Martin Clardy, b. Apr. 26, 1844 ; Law- 
ciardy 1^^- Issue : (i) Martin IP., b. Aug. 7, 1880. (ii) 

Virginia C^., b. June 30, 1883. 
Cayce iii- Nannie C®., b. July 1, 1856; m., Jan. 14, 

1879, Kossuth W. Weher, b. May 20, 1854; d. 
July 21, 1899 ; ( Lawyer, and at one time Mayor 
of Farmington, Mo.). Issue: 
Weber. (i) Kossuth^ b. Nov. 9, 1879. (ii) Frank^ b. 

Aug. 29, 1881. (iii) James Harry ^ 
(iv) M. P^. (v) William Dupuy^. (vi) Jennie^ 
Last four died. 
Dupuy. IV. Sarah Lyle^Dupuy, (Twin), b. July 4, 1830; 
m. 1st. Valentine Peers, of Farmington, Mo. ; m. 

2d. Watson, M. D., of Kentucky. Issue by 

1st. m: 
Peers. i- KatherineS b. Oct., 1856 ; d. Oct., 1858. 

ii. John Valentine^, m. C. Hord, of Sherman, 
Tex. Issue: (i) Katherine'^. (ii) Marjorie 
Kenneth^. 
Dupuy. V. Frances J.^Dupuy, (Twin), b. July 4, 1830; 
m. Rev. Thomas Cole Smith; (Presbyterian and 
for many years the Stated Clerk of the Synod of 
Missouri), b. Nov. 9, 1823 ; d. Dec. 11, 1896. Issue: 
Smith. i. Charlton H«., b. Oct. 22, 1853. ii. Sarah V«., 
b. Sept. 22, 1856; d. Aug. 19, 1858. 
iii. Elizabeth Dupuy°; Stenographer; b. Jan. 
13 1859 

iv.' Thomas Cole Spencer^ b. Sept. 8, 1862; m. 
Willie White, of Kansas City, Mo. Issue: 

(i) Raymond Dupuy'^. 
V. Emma Lee''; Stenographer; b. July 5, 1865. 
vi. Rev. Robert Asa^ ; Studied Theology private- 
Iv ; Licensed, Oct. 30, 1895, by the Presbytery of 
Butte; Ordained, Nov. 8, 1896, by the Presby- 
tery of Boise; Pastor of Pavette, Idaho, 1896; 
b.. High Hill, Mo., July 22, 1869; m. Lucy Good- 



238 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

James H ^Dupuy , m. Elizabeth G.^Dupuy, (p. 189). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. j.j^jj^ qj Montgomery, Mo. Issue: (i) Warren 
Dupuy. Dupuy^ 

VI. Margaret L.^Dupuy, b. Feb., 1832; d. Apr., 

1864; m., Apr. 2, 1851, Richard C. Thompson, b. 

Apr. 13, 1831 ; d. Oct. 9, 1867. Issue: 

Thomp- i. Elizabeth C^, b. May 9, 1852 ; m. Oct. 28, 1869, 

^°"' George B. Ligon. Issue: 

Ligon. (i) Edward F^., b. Nov. 12, 1870. (ii) Myrtle 

B^., b. June 28, 1882. 
Thomp- ii, Samuel Anderson^, b. May 4, 1854. ill. Mary 
^°°' Ellens iv. Cornelia®. 

V. James Dupuy*'. vi. William D®. Last five died. 

Dupuy. VII. Asa PurneiPDupuy, b., 1834; d. of wounds 

received, Apr. 6, 1862, at the battle of Shiloh, in C. 

S. A. ; m. Julia Williams. Issue : i. James Henry*. 

ii. Duke Williams*', iii. Marv Frances*'. 

VIII. William HalP Dupuy, Adjutant of the 18th. 
and 19th. Arkansas Regiments of Infantry, Govan's 
Brigade, Cleburne's Division, C. S. A.; d. May 29, 
1864, of wound received, May 27, 1864, in an en- 
gagement of the Army of Tennessee, around New 
Hope Church, Paulding Co., Ga. 

IX. John James^Dupuy; Hampden-Sidney Col- 
lege, Va., B. A., and First Honor; A^olunteer in C. 
S. A., and served to the close of the Civil War; At- 
torney General, for 16 years, of the 13th Judicial 
Circuit Court of Tennessee; Practised Law late in 
life in Memphis, Tenn., where he died suddenly, 
Nov. 29, 1898; m. Sarah Baskerville. No issue. 

X. Emma W.^ Dupuy; m. E. P. Cayce; (Son of 
M. P. Cayce, by his 1st wife). Issue: 
Cayce. i. Lillian Maude*' ; d. an infant, ii. Elsie E®. ; 

Secretary of the Woman's Missionary Union of 

Potosi Presbytery, iii. Julian Paul®, iv. Alice 

Adele®. 
Dupuy. XI. Cornelia T.^Dupuy ; d. unmarried. 



LINE OF PETEE^DUPUY. 239 

Elvira^Dupuy, m. Col. Richard B. Eggleston, (p. 

190). Issue: 

Ch ap. II I. I, John William^Egfijleston; Leading merchant 
Eggies- f()j. years at Charlotte C. H., Va.; b. June 7, 1828; 
d., Charlotte C. H., Va., Nov. 12, 1897; m., Nov. 20, 
1849, Lucy Nash Morton, b. Mar. 7, 1825 ; d., Char- 
lotte C. H., Va., June 29, 1892. Issue: 

i. Beverly PurnelP, b. July 10, 1851 ; m., Dec. 6, 
1882, Fannie P. Ligon, b. July 12, 1861. Issue: 
(i) John William^ b. Aug. 7, 1883; d. June 
16, 1884. (ii) Lucy Nash^ b. Nov. 2, 1884. 
(iii) Leigh Ligon^ b. July 19, 1887. (iv) Bev- 
erly PurnelP, b. Nov. 30, 1889. 
(v) David Quin', b. June 19, 1893. (vi) and 
(vii) John Morton'^, and Fannie Louisa"^, b. 
Nov. 26, 1896. 
ii. John Morton^ b. Aug. 10, 1853 ; d. June 22, 
1870. 

iii. David Quin®; Hampden-Sidney College; 
University of Va.; Senator of Va., 1897-1901; 
Member of Va. Constitutional Conv., 1901-2; 
Lawyer; Secretary of the Commonwealth of 
Virginia; b. June 11, 1857; m., Nov. 29, 1883, 
Susan E. Daniel, b. Nov. 8, 1860; [Daughter of 
Joseph M. and Fannie T. (Watkins) Daniel]. 
Issue: (i) Daisy Daniel^, b. Nov. 14, 1884. (ii) 
John William^ b. June 18, 1886. (iii) Samuel 
Daniel, b. Oct. 17, 1887. (iv) Beverly Pur- 
nelF, b. Julv 9, 1890. (v) Mary Elizabeth^, b. 
Dec. 12, 1892. 
II. James Asa^Eggleston, b. Feb. 24, 1830; d. 
May 18, 1890; m., Oct. 14, 1857, Martha Shore, b. 
Dec. 17, 1838. Issue: i. James Fletcher®, b. July 
14, 1858; d. Nov. 2, 1894. ii. Elvira Dupuy®, b. 
July 20, 1860. iii. Lelia Graeme®, b. jMar. 21, 
1862; m., Sept. 25, 1888, Walter Harris Robert- 
son, b. Jan. 27, 1859. Issue: 
Robert- (i) I^elia Eggleston^ b. Feb. 27, 1890. (ii) 

son. Paul', b., June 20, 1892. (iii) Walter Harris", 

b. Mar. 15, 1896; d. Dec. 12, 1898. 



240 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Elvira^Dupuy, m. Col. Richard B. Eggleston, (p. 
190). Issue — Continued: 

Chapjii. iy^ i^jary Louisa^ b. Jan. 20, 1866. v. Martha 
Eggies- Rebekah*^, b. Aug. 18, 1872. vi. Julia Howard*', 
toJi- b. June 1, 1875. vii. Robert Skelton^ b. May 2, 

1882. viii. Kate Shore% b. Jan. 29, 1885. 

III. Joseph Dupuy^Eggleston, M. D., Philadel- 
phia Medical College; Located at "Marble Hill," 
Prince Edward Co., Va., and later moved to Wor- 
sham, in the same county; Did an extensive prac- 
tice throughout that and adjoining counties ; Physi- 
cian for Hampden-Sidney College and Union Theo- 
logical Seminary, Va. ; b. Oct. 28, 1831 ; m. Nov. 16, 
1858, Nannie Carrington Booker, b. Feb. 3, 1836; d. 
July 3, 1898. Issue: 

i. William Green^ b. Oct. 15, 1859 ; m. Blanche 

V. Stokes. Issue: 
(i) William Stokes^, (ii) Arthur Dupuy^ 

ii. Mary C^, b. Apr. 23, 1861 ; m. 1st. Robert A. 

Wailes ; m. 2d. Julian Taylor. Issue by 2d. m : 
Taylor (i) Julian'^, b. Apr. 17, 1899. 

P , * iii. John Booker«, b. Sept. 12, 1863; d. Sept. 20, 
ton!^" 1863. iv. Lucilla Margaret^ b. Jan. 30, 1866. 

V. Joseph Dupuy^; Elected, 1905, Superintend- 
ent of Public Schools of the State of Virginia; 

b. Nov. 13, 1867; m., Dec. 18, 1895, Julia J. 

Johnson. Issue: 
(i) Elizabeth Carrington^ b. Mar. 17, 1899. 

vi. John Bookers b. Julv 5, 1872; d. May, 1873. 

vii. Nannie C^, b. Apr., 1874; d. July, 1874. viii. 

Nelia PurnelP, b. Dec. 19, 1877. 

IV. George Markham^Eggleston, b., Cumberland 
Co., Va., Sept. 12, 1833 ; d. May 21, 1896 ; m. June 2, 
1856, Mary Lyle. Issue: 

i. and ii. Archibald^ and Alexander^, b. Mar. 30, 

1857 ; d. next day. 

iii. Mary TerhuneS b. Dec. 9, 1858. iv. Martha 

Elvira^, b. Sept. 20, 1860; d. Jan. 18, 1861. 

V. Nannie JosephineS (Twin), b. May 16, 1862; 

m. Sept. 8, 1891, Chas. H. Gihbs, M. D. Issue: 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 



241 



C hap. Il l, 
Gibbs. 

Eggles- 
ton. 



Bull. 



Eggles- 
ton. 

Shore. 



Elvira^ D upuy , m. Col. Richard B. Eggleston, (p. 
190). Issue — Continued: 

(i) Charles Randolph', b. June 28, 1897. (ii) 

Mary Eggleston', b. Jan. 22, 1899. 
vi. Matthew Lyle'^ (Twin), b. May 16, 1862; m., 
Sept. 8, 1896, Mary Fitzhugh. Issue : 

(i) Carrie Lyle% b. Jan. 3, 1898. 
vii. Henry Markham^ b. Sept. 12, 1865 ; d. Oct. 
23, 1866. 

viii. Rev. Richard Beverly^ ; Hampden-Sidney 
College, Va. ; Union Theological Seminary, Va., 
1891; Licensed, Apr., 1891; Ordained, Sept., 
1891, by the Presbytery of West Hanover; Pas- 
tor of "^Gordonsville, Va., 1891-95, of Liberty, 
Va., 1895-97, of Court St. church, Portsmouth, 
Va., 1897-1901, of the Third church, Richmond, 
Va., 1901- ; b., Nottoway Co., Va., Mar. 4, 1867; 
m., Nov. 28, 1894, Martha Lyle Wills, b. Sept. 11, 
1869. Issue : 

(i) Richard Beverly^ b. Mar. 28, 1896. (ii) 

Martha Lyle^ b. Apr. 9, 1898. 
ix. Lucv Morton*', b. Apr. 4, 1871; m. Apr. 26, 
1892,Rev. Griffin William Bull, b.,Leon Co.,Fla; 
(Hampden-Sidney College, Va., 1890; Union 
Theological Seminary, Va., 1892; Licensed by 
the Presbvterv of East Hanover, and Ordained 
by the Presb;^^ery of Macon, 1892; Pastor of 
Cuthbert, Ga., 2 years, of Opelika, Ga., 2 years, 
of West End church, Atlanta, Ga., 1896-1903, of 
More IMemorial, Nashville, Tenn., 1903-). Issue: 

(i) Lucy Eggleston', b. July 28, 1893. (ii) 

Mary Ho]land^ b. June 29, 1895. 
V. IMary Jane^Eogloston, b. Sept. 9, 1835, m., 
Oct. 21, 18.57, Robert E. SJiorc. Issue: 

i. Daughter*', b. and d. Mav 1, 1859. ii. Mary 

Louise^ b. Mav 19, 1860; d. Mar. 1, 1863. 

iii. IMartha Elvira^ b. IMav 5, 1862; d. Mar. 1, 

1863. iv. Son% b. and d. Feb. 20, 1864. 

V. Robert Edwin°, b. Apr. 5, 1865. vi. Beverly 

Eggleston", b. July 11, 1867. 



242 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. II I. 
Shore. 



McLeod. 

Shore. 

Perkin- 
son. 

Shore. 

McAulay. 

Shore. 



Eggles- 
ton. 

Howard. 



Lamar. 
Howard. 



Burnett. 
Howard. 



Elvira*Dupup, m. Col. Richard B. Eggleston, (p. 

190). Issue — Continued: 

vii. Cornelia Howard^, b. Aug. 1, 1869 ; m., Oct. 
31, 1889, Rev. Kenneth A. McLeod, b., Rich- 
mond Co., N. C; (Davidson College, N. C, B. 
A., 1886; Union Theological Seminary, Va., 
1889; Licensed, June, 1889; Ordained, Aug., 
1889, by the Presbytery of Fayetteville; Pastor 
of Peedee, and Sharon, N. C, 1889-94, of Jones- 
boro, Mt. Pisgah, St. Andrews and Salem, N. 
C, 1894- ). Issue: (i) Mamie Little^ b. Oct. 5, 

1890. (ii) William Shore*, b. Apr. 7, 1895. 

(iii) Lelia Marguerite'^, b. Sept. 2, 1897. 
viii. Sallie Fletcher^, b. Sept. 18, 1871 ; m., June 
28, 1893, Thomas Perkinson. Issue: 

(i) Edward Bland^ b. Mar. 10, 1894. (ii) 

Thomas Randolph^ b. Sept. 2, 1895. 

(iii) Janie Elizabeth'^, b. Apr. 4, 1898. 
ix. Lou Ward«, b. Dec. 24, 1873; d. May 26, 
1899; m., Oct. 17, 1894, John McAulay. Issue: 

(i) Mary Louise^ b. Aug. 6, 1895. (ii) Rob- 
bie Stanback^ b. Aug. 10, 1898. 
X. John James^, b. Aug. 18, 1876. xi. Julia 
Dupuy% b. Aug. 18, 1879. 
VI. Cornelia A^ Eggleston, b. Aug. 21, 1839 ; m., 
Dec. 18, 1866, Alfred Grattan Howard. Issue: 
i. Alfred Grattan«, b. Oct. 4, 1867. 
ii. Cornelia Eggleston^, b. June 8, 1869; m., 
Dec. 18, 1894, Norman Lamar. Issue: 

(i) Henry Howard^ b. Dec. 18, 1895. 
iii. Joseph Beverly^, b. May 6, 1871; m., Dec. 
15, 1896, Martha Burch. Issue: 

(i) C. Elizabeth^ b. July 23, 1896. 
iv. May Elvira^, b., 1873. v. Anna Thome*, m., 
Aug. 17, 1898, B. W. Burnett. Issue: 

(i) Cornelia E'., b. May 28, 1899. 
V. Paul Dupuy^. vi. Charles Langhorn*. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 



243 



Martha B^. Dupuy, m. Wm. McEinney (p. 190). 

Issue: 



Mc- 
Kinney. 



Bridges. 
Roy. 

Bridges. 



Chap. III. I. Robert Jennings^ McKinney, b. Oct. 6, 1811; d. 
Sept. 11, 1833. 

II. Martha Louisa'^ McKinney, b. Jan. 28, 1813; 
d. May 27, 1845; m.. Mar. 8, 1831, David Bridges, 
b. Dec. 23, 1810. Issue: 

i. Katherine Louisa*^ ; m., Oct. 10, 1841, James 
Philip Roy, b. Apr. 30, 1828; d. Oct. 24, 1876. 
Issue: (i) Lizzie Perkins^, b. May 19, 1856. 
(ii) Kate Louise^, b. Sept. 25, 1857. 
(iii) Susan Carter^, b. Oct. 6, 1859. (iv) 
James Philip^ b. Sept. 24, 1861. 
ii. Martha Caskie^ ; d. Oct., 1883. 
iii. William McKinney*^, b. May 5, 1835; m., 
Apr. 13, 1871, Lucy Gary Cocke. Issue : 
(i) Philip St. George^ b. Mar. 3, 1872. (ii) 
Lucy Cary% b. Aug. 28, 1873. (iii) Maggie 
Fergusson^, b. Mar. 13, 1875 ; d. June 15, 1875. 
(iv) Courtney Bowdoin^ b. Aug. 23, 1876, (v) 
William Kennon^ b. Jan. 30, 1878. (vi) Eve- 
lyn Condie', b. July 7, 1880. (vii) David 
Quarrier', b. Feb. 14, 1883. 
iv. Julia CabelP, b. Sept. 4, 1837; d. Oct. 10, 
1837. 

V. Florence^ b. Oct. 23, 1838; d. Feb. 25, 1839. 
vi. David^ b. Oct. 2, 1841 ; d. May 18, 1863, of 
disease contracted in Company F., 21st. Vir- 
ginia Regiment of Infantry, C. S. A. 
vii. Clifford CabelP, b. Mar. 26, 1845; m., Nov. 
24, 1870, Lizzie Rogan Macgill. Issue: 
(i) Kate Copdie^ b. Sept. 11, 1871; d. July 
27, 1875. (ii) Mary M^., b. Apr. 29, 1873; d. 
June 18, 1873. (iii) Lizzie M^., b. Sept. 10, 
1874. (iv) Ida Hairston^, b. Sept. 25, 1876; 
d. Apr. 9, 1878. (v) Lelia Carroll", b. July 
23, 1878. (vi) Condie Rov'', b. Julv 17, 1880. 
(vii) Mollie M^., b. Mav 18, 1882. (viii) 
jlc. Charles M^, b. Nov. 27, 1884. 

Kinney. III. Peter Dupuy'^McKiuney, b. June 6, 1815; 



244 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

I 
Martha B^. Bupuy, in. Wm. McKinney (p. 190). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. Il l, d, Aug. 5, 1875; m., May 15, 1856, Sarah Ann Lyle, 
McKin- b. Oct. 13, 1824 ; d. Jan 22, 1885. Issue : 
ney. i. Helen LeVert% b. Feb. 28, 1858. ii. William 

Barrett^, b. May 13, 1859. 

iii. Lelia Bland% b. Sept. 20, 1861; d. July 4, 
1862. iv. Charles Lyle«, b. Feb. 2, 1866. 

Jane G^. Dupuy, m. Thomas McKinney, (p. 192). 

Issue: 

I. Margaret Logan^McKinney, b. Mar. 30, 1827. 

II. Charles Eugene^McKinney, b. June 23, 1828; 
d. Nov. 16, 1848. 

III. Thomas Hampden^ McKinney; Emigrated to 
Cadiz, Ky; b. May 24, 1830; m., Apr. 23, 1867, 
Emma Arsenath Thomas, b. Dec. 6, 1842. Issue: 

i. Maggie Belle% b. Mar. 15, 1868. ii. Ro Lin- 

naeus% b. Feb. 2, 1870. 

iii. Kate Dupuy% b.. May 10, 1872. 

IV. Sarah Jane^McKinney, b. Sept. 22, 1832 ; d. 
Sept. 5, 1834. 

V. Robert Martin^McKinney; Colonel in C. S. 
A; b. June 25, 1837; Killed in battle, Apr. 16, 1862, 
at Dam, No. 1, near Lee's Mill on the Peninsula. 

VI. Linnaeus Barrett^McKinnev, b. June 29, 
1840; Killed in battle in C. S. A., Mar. 31, 1865. 

VII. Ellen Dupny^McKinney, b. Mar. 24, 1842; 
m. Nov. 5, 1872, John Thomas Berry, b. Dec. 4, 

Berry. 1839. Issue: i. Margaret Olivia^ b. Apr. 13, 1874. 
ii. Thomas Dorsey% b. Feb. 22, 1876. iii. Wil- 
liam ElbertS b. Nov. 24, 1877. 

Virgina A^. Dupuy, m. WilJiam W. Michie, (p. 

192). Issue: 

Michie. L Cornelia Virginia^Michie, b. Mar. 22, 1831; 
m. Jan. 19, 1849, Robert Bruce Watkins, b. Aug. 
13, 1822. Issue: 
Watkins. i. Robert BruceS b. Nov. 21, 1849. ii. Vir- 
ginia Dupuy«, b. Sept. 3, 1851 ; d. Oct. 3, 1851. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 



245 



■Virginia A.^Dupuy, m. William W. MicMe, (p. 192). 

Issue — ConUnued : 

iii. Edward Waverl/, b. Aug. 19, 1852. d. Oct 
22, 1858 ; iv. Evangeline St. C^., b. Mar. 13, 1855. 
V. Amelia Louisa", b. Mar. 29, 1857. vi. Flor- 
ence N«., b. May 21, 1859; d. Nov. 19, 1862. 
vii. Virginia Judith^, b. Oct 9, 1861. viii. 
Anna Adelaide®, b. Mar. 1, 1864. 
ix. 6arr^i»eHLiawrence®, b. Apr. 11, 1867. 
Charlotte Ellen^ b. Mar. 20, 1870. 
xi. Raymond Lavillon", b. Mar. 11, 1872. 

Moses F^.^ Dupuy, in. Phoebe Stephenson, (p. 192), 

Issue: 



I. Thomas^ Dupuy, b. Aug. 8, 1819; d. Mar. 1, 
1848; m. Louisa Crump. Issue: 

i. Louisa*^, m. R. B. Riggs. No issue. 

II. Sarah Ann^Dupuy, b. Sept. 29, 1820; d. Mar., 
1892 ; m. Simpson Crump. Issue, 10. 

III. William^ Dupuy; Deputy Sheriff of Greenup 
Co., Ky. ; b. Jan. 17, 1824; d. May 14, 1848. Never 
married. 

IV. Richard Stephenson^ Dupuy; Reared in 
Greenup Co., Ky., of which he was Deputy Clerk 
for 12 years ;Liyed 11 years in Lewis Co., Ky. ; 
Moved to Ironton, O., 1864 ; Declined a nomination 
to the Ohio Legislature; Captain in U. S. A. in 
the Civil War; Owner of a large Tannery in Iron- 
ton, O. ; b. Sept. 10, 1825 ; m. 1st. Martha Waring, 
(Daughter of Bazel Wearing, Son of Gen. Thomas 
Waring, of the Revolution, who received a grant of 
land in Kentucky, for services rendered his 
Country) ; m. 2d. May 31, 1865, Cynthia Garland, 

Ironton, O., Feb. 22, 1904 

Page, 246 



b. Oct. 22, 1840 ; d. 



V. Martha^Dupuy, b. Aug. 29, 1827; d. Oct 23, 
1854; m. Andrew Jackson Arnold. 



Arnold. Issue: i. Leonard W^., M. D. ; m. 
2 boys'^ and 1 girF. 



Issue 



246 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Moses F^. Dupuy, m. Phoehe Stephenson, (p. 192). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap III ^^' Albert Gallatin^ Dupuy, b. Mar. 16, 1829; d. 
D^ ^^y 1^' 1^9'^ ' ^-^ ^^^' 1^' 18^2, Anne B. Lee, b. 

May 25, 1844 Page, 249 

VIL Mary Jane^Dupuy, b. Oct. 22, 1834; m., 
May 5, 1859, Thomas P. Goodwin, b. Feb. 3, 1835; 
d. Sept. 15, 1899. Issue: 
Goodwin. i- Maria Louisa^, b. Feb. 2, 1864; m., Apr. 27, 
1887, James A. Keith. Issue: 
Keith. (i) Nellie"^, (ii) Mary Kate'^. Others. 

Goodwin "• Charles Allbert^, b. Jan. 6, 1866 ; m., Oct. 16, 
1890, Clara Paul. Issue: (i) PauF. 
iii. Sarah Jane^, b. June 11, 1867; m., Nov. 26, 
1900, R. H. Ramsdell. 

iv. Ella Daisy^ b. Jan. 30, 1874; m., Apr. 30, 
1902, Charles Dudley Brown, b. Mar. 24, 1875. 
Issue: (i) Daughter"^. 

V. Thomas Dupuy^, b. May 6, 1875 ; m., Dec. 26, 
1899, Nellie Harrington. 

Richard S.^ Dupuy, m. 1st. Martha Waring, (p. 21f5). 

Issue : 

Dupuy. L Thomas^ Dupuy, d. in infancy. 

II. James Newton^Dupuy ; Graduate of the Hol- 
lingsworth and Eaton's Business College, Cincin- 
nati, O. ; Held offices of Eminent Commander of 
Ironton Commandery, No. 45, K. T., and High 
Priest of Lagrange Chapter, No. 68, R. A. M., and 
offices in other orders ; Many years Superintendent 
of the M. E. S. S., in Kinney Bottom; A Tanner and 
Currier; b., Greenup Co., Ky., Mar. 15, 1851; m. 
1st., Lewis Co., Ky., Oct. 15, 1873, Nattie A. V. 
Garland; d. June 18, 1888; m, 2d., Greenup Co., 
Ky., Oct. 23, 1889, Sallie Howland, b. July 3, 1870. 
Issue by 1st m : 

i. Eva Frances^, b., Lewis Co., Ky., Aug. 7, 

1874; m. 1st., Aug. 7, 1892, Frank Arnold; d. 

Feb., 1893. Issue: (i) Frances^; m. 2d., Apr. 

15, 1896, Wilson Coverston. Issue: 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 247 

Richard S.^Bupuy, m. 1st. Martha Waring, (p. 2Jf5). 

Issue — Continued: 

Chap. Ill, (ii) Edna^, b. Dec. 11, 1897. 
i^^y ii. Elbert Stephenson'^, M. D. ; Miami Medical 
College, Cincinnati, O., 1900; Began practice 
of Medicine in Fayette Co., W. Va. ; b., Lewis 
Co., Ky., Mar. 20, 1876 ; m., June 10, 1903, Lil- 
lian Dixon, Issue: (i) Elbert Newton^, b. 

Oct. 20, 1904. 
iii. Frank Garland^, b., Lewis Co., Ky., Feb. 1, 
1884; Student of Cincinnati Dental College. 

Issue of James N^. hy his 2d. m: 

iv. Esther^ b. Mar. 3, 1894. 

III. Francis Albert'' Dupuy; Eminent Commander 
of Ironton Commandery, K. T. ; Elected one of 
five laymen by the Ohio M. E. Conference to the 
General Conference of the M. E. Church in Los 
Angeles, Cal., May, 1904 ; Member of the Executive 
Committee of the Ohio Sunday School Association, 
1903-04; Treasurer of the Lawrence County Sun- 
day School Association; Superintendent of the 
Wesley M. E. Church Sunday School, Ironton, O. ; 
Author of "The Layman's Duty in Church Fi- 
nance"; etc.; b. Jan. 28, 1855; m., Sept. 2, 1878, 
Marietta Thomas, b. May 22, 1857. Issue: 

i. Richard Dean^, b. June 29, 1879 ; d. June 21, 

1880. 

ii. Benjamin Francis"^; Ohio State University; 

Civil Engineer of the Chesapeake and Ohio R. 

R. ; b. Mar. 20, 1881 ; m., Columbus, O., Apr. 27, 

1907, Lorena Garrison. Moved to California. 

iii. Van A'^., b. June 6, 1883; accidentally 

drowned, July 6, 1893. 

iv. Victor Newton^, b. July 20, 1885. v. Helen^ 

b. May 17, 1891. 

vi. Florence Martha^ b. Aug. 12, 1892. vii. 

Marion^ b. Mar. 11, 1890 ; d. Oct. 28, 1899. 

IV. William^Dupuy, accidentally drowned in 
Ironton, O. 



248 GENEALOGY WITH BKIE.F SKETCHES. 

Richard S.^Dupuy, m. 1st. Martha Waring, (p. 2Jf5). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. II I. V. Trevanian Van^Dupuy, M. D. ; Miami Medical 
Dupuy. College, Cincinnati, O., 1889; Assistant Surgeon of 
the Central Branch, National Military Home for 
disabled volunteer soldiers, Dayton, O., 1889-90; 
Resident Physician and Surgeon of the Ohio Sol- 
dier's and Sailor's Orphan's Home, Xenia, O., 1890- 
92 ; Began practice of Medicine and Surgery, Day- 
ton, O., 1892; Member of the Board of United States 
Examining Surgeons for Pensions, from Montgom- 
ery Co., O., 1893-96; Elected Honorary member of 
the "Veteran's Union," and appointed aid-de-camp, 
with rank of Colonel, on the Staff of the Com- 
mander-in-chief; Appointed captain and assistant 
Surgeon of the Third Regiment, Ohio National 
Guards ; Member of the American Medical Associa- 
tion and the Montgomery county Medical Society; 
Chairman for six years of the Montgomery county 
Democratic Central Committee; b., Lewis Co., Ky., 
June 17, 1861. 

Richard S.^Duput/, m. 2d. Cynthia Garland, (p. 
2^i5). Issue — Continued: 

Vi;. Edwin Garland^ Dupuy; d, aged 10 yrs. 

VII. Harry Clay ton*' Dupuy; d. aged 16 yrs. 

VIII. Mary Estella'^ Dupuy ; Attended Miss Cast- 
ner's School for Girls, Ironton, O. ; b. Nov. 17, 1871 ; 
m,, Ironton, O., Nov. 17, 1891, Clinton Harvey 
Towns of Pomeroy, O., b. Jan. 20, 1869, (Telegraph 

Towns. Operator). Issue: i. Alma Ruth^, b., Ironton, O., 
Feb. 12, 1893. 

ii. Helen Garland'^, b. Jan, 1, 1895. iii. Richard 
Dupuy^, b. Jan. 4, 1897. iv. Mary Cynthia^ b. 
Aug. 4, 1899. V. Anna Jean^ b. Aug. 29, 1900. 
vi. Emma Dorothy^, b. Jan. 3, 1902. vii, Eliza- 
beth Gertrude^ b. Aug. 3, 1903. 
Dupuy. IX. Anna Ellen^Dupuy, b. May 6, 1873; d. Apr. 

27, 1896; m., May 9, 1894, Jesse Wilber Darling, 

of Ironton, O. 



LINE OF PETER^DUPUY. 249 

Albert G.^Dupuy, m. Anne B. Lee, (p. 246). Issue: 

Chap. III. I- Agnes Mary^'Dupuy, b. Oct. 24, 1864; m., Sept. 
— ^ 4, 1888, William James Stephens, b. July 7, 1858. 
Stephens. Issue : i. George Albert^, b. June 27, 1889. 

il. Frank Charles^, b. Apr. 28, 1891. iii. Marian 
Elizabeth^ b. June 7, 1895. 
iv. Florence Maj^, b. Nov. 17, 1897. 
Dupuy. II. Samuel Edward*^' Dupuy, b. July 11, 1866; m., 
Dec. 19, 1891, Anna Bell Athey, from Parkersburg, 
W. Va., b. Oct. 22, 1869; (Daughter of a M. E. 
Minister). Issue: 

i. Albert^, b. Jan. 26, 1893. ii. Marguerette^, b. 
Mar. 7, 1895. iii. Genevieve^ b. Mar. 11, 1899. 

III. Eossweir^ Dupuy, b. Oct. 30, 1869; m., Nov. 
6, 1895, Virginia B. Hardman,b. Nov. 1, 1873. Issue: 

i. Essie Marie^ b. Aug. 28, 1896 ; d. Dec. 5, 1896. 
ii. Ravmond F'., b. Sept. 14, 1897. 
iii. Clifford Hardman^ b. Apr. 23, 1900. iv. Vir- 
gil", b. Sept. 22, 1902. 

IV. William" Dupuy, b. May 9, 1872; m., Oct. 7, 
1896, Gertrude C. Humphrey, b. July 20, 1876. 
Issue: i. Clarence EarF, b. Jan. 10, 1898. 

ii. Leonard Humphrey^, b. Aug. 20, 1900. iii. 
Roy Ottis, b. Mar. 10, 1902. 

V. Earnest Richard" Dupuy, b. Aug. 30, 1875. 

VI. Bessie^Dupuy, b. Feb. 3, 1883; d. July 1, 
1885. 

Line of Martha^ (Dupuy) Chastain. 

31 artha^ Dupuy, in. Stephen Chastain, (p. 179). 

Issue : 

Chastain. I. Mary Magdalene^Chastain, b.. King William 
Parish, Va., Aug. 23, 1727, (Baptismal Register, 
No. 5) ; m., about 1742, James Cocke, of Henrico 
Co., Va. ; (Son of James Powell and IMartha Cocke^ 
b. about 1690, d., 1747, vestryman of Henrico Par- 
ish, 1730-47; Son of Capt. Thomas Cocke, ap- 
pointed Sheriff of Henrico county, 1699, d., 1707; 
Son of Thomas and Margaret Cocke, of "Pickthorne 



250 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 

Martha^Dupuy, m. Stephen Chastain, (p. 179). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. Farm," Henrico Co., d., 1697; Son of Richard 
Chastain. Cocke, who immigrated to America from Leeds, 
Yorkshire, England, prior to 1636, and settled 
"Malvern Hill," Henrico Co., Va. ; Representative 
of Henrico county in the House of Burgesses, 1644- 
54, and for some time County Lieutenant; The 
Progenitor of the Cocke family of Virginia, and 
the Southern and Western parts of the United 

States) Below 

II. Stephen^Chastain, b., King William Parish, 
Va., Mar. 1, 1729. (Baptismal Register, No. 10). 

Mary M."^ Chastain, m. James Cocke, (ahove). Issue : 
Cocke. I. Chastain^Cocke; The progenitor of the branch 

of Cockes, of "Clover Pasture," Powhatan Co., Va. ; 

b., in King William Parish, Va., Nov. 13, 1743 "7 "^^ 

(Baptismal Register, No. 31) ; d. Mar. 19, 1795; m. 

Martha Field Archer, b. Dec. 21, 1752; d. Feb. 27, 

1816; [Daughter of John and Elizabeth (Royall) 

Archer]. Issue: 

i. James% b. Jan. 12, 1770 ; d. Aug. 17, 1825 ; m. 
Mary Lewis, of Williamsburg, Va., b. Nov., 

1775; d. June 10, 1853 Page 252 

ii. William ArcherS b. Dec. 22, 1771 ; d. Jan. 13, 
1844 ; m. Catherine Murray Winston Ronald, b. 

Oct. 18, 1771; d. Mar. 2, 1840 Page 253 

iii. Chastain^ b. Jan. 30, 1775; d., 1797, at sea. 
iv. BowlerS b. Aug. 15, 1777; d. Aug. 18, 1777. 
V. Elizabeth RoyallS b. Apr. 14, 1778; d. Sept. 

7, 1820; m. Joseph Royall Page 254 

vi. John Field* ; Captain of Cavalry in the War 

of 1812; b. Apr. 9, 1784; d. Jan. 26, 1857; m., 

/'^ at "Comoton," Powhatan Co., Va., May 5, 1818, 

^^ Anne Waller Ronald, b. Feb. 17, 1792*^; d. June 

24, 1834 Page 255 

vii. Mary MagdaleneS b. Oct. 29, 1786; d. Feb. 
23, 1802. 

viii. Richard Herbert*, M. D., b. Aug. 31, 1788 ; 
d. Aug. 29, 1814; m. Eliza Green, of Amelia 



LINEOFMARTHA^D.) CHASTAIN. 251 

Mary M.^Chastain, m. James Cocke (p. 250). 
Issue — Continued : 

Ch ap. III . Co., Va. (Daughter of Col. Abram Green of 
Cocke. same county). No issue. 

ix. Joseph Archer^ b. Oct. 15, 1790; d. Oct. 17, 

1811. 

X. Stephen Cannon*, b. Mar. 3, 1794 ; d. Mar. 7, 

1795. 

II. James PowelPCocke ; Lived at "Malvern 
Hill" ; d. Jan. 13, 1829 ; m. 1st., Nov. 29, 1767, Eliz- 
abeth Archer; d., 1773, without issue; m. 2d., Sept., 
1777, Lucy Smith, b. Oct., 1756; d. Feb. 27, 1816. 
Issue : 

i. James Powell^ b. Oct. 10, 1779; d. Dec. 27, 
1811 ; m, Martha Ann Lewis, d. June 4, 1856. 
ii. Smiths b. Aug. 2, 1792; d., 1735. 
iii. Chastain^ b. Feb. 1, 1795; d. Dec. 16, 1838. 
iv. MaryS b. Oct. 21, 1796; m., Apr. 18, 1816, 
Charles Warner Lewis Carter, M. D., b. Aug., 
1773; d. Nov. 7, 1867. [Son of Edward and 

Mary Randolph (Lewis) Carter] Page 256 

v. Martha*, b. June 14, 1799 ; d. July 12, 1874 ; 
m., Feb. 1, 1825, Valentine Wood Southall, (his 
2d. wife), of Charlottesville, Va., b., 1793; d. 
Aug. 22, 1861; [Distinguished lawyer; Speaker 
of the House of Delegates of Virginia, and 
Member of the Conventions of 1850-51 and of 
1861 ; Son of Major Stephen and Martha (Wood) 
Southall; Son of Turner and Elizabeth (Bar- 
ret) Southall; Son of Dacey and Martha 
(daughter of Nathaniel Vandervall) Southall, 
who settled in Henrico Co., Va., about 
1750] Page 257 

III. Stephen^Cocke; m. Jane Segar Eggleston, 
of Amelia Co., Va. (Sister of Major Joseph Eggles- 
ton of the Revolution). Issue: 

i. Joseph Eggleston*, m. Anne Mosby. ii. James 
Powell*, m. Caroline Lewis, iii. Charles*, m. 
Sarah W. Taylor, iv. Judith*, m. Peterfield 
Archer, v. Mary C*., m. Richard Archer, vi. 



252 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 

Mary M.^Chastain, m. James Cocke (p. 250). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . Martha^, m. W. T. Eggieston. vii. Nancy^, d. 
Cocke. young, viii. Jane Segar*, m. James Hobson. 

IV. Martha^Cocke ; m. William Cannon (his 2(i. 
wife) of Buckingham Co. Va., d. 1820. Issue: i. 
Cannon. John*, ii. William*. The father and two sons 
moved to Tennessee in 1812, and thence to West- 
ern, Ky., in 1820, where the father died that year, 
and was buried in Caldwell county. 
Cocke. V. Elizabeth Chastain^Cocke; m. Henry Ander- 
son, of Amelia Co., Va., and had issue of four sons 
and three daughters. 

James^Cocke, m. Mary Lewis (p. 250). Issue: 

I. Martha^Cocke. II. Chastain^Cocke; d. in in- 
fancy. III. James^Cocke. 

IV. James Lewis^ Cocke. 

V. Elizabeth Aubyn^Cocke; m. Armistead Green, 
of "Farm Hill," Amelia Co., Va. Issue: 

Green. I Rosalie^ ; m. Richard F. Taylor, M. D. [Son 
of Richard and Mary (Harrison, of Brandon) 
Taylor, of Prince George Co., Va.]. Issue: 
Taylor. ( j ) Armistead Green^, M. D. ; m. Pattie Harvie, 

of Amelia Co., Va. (ii) Evelyn Harrison'^. 
(iii) George Keith'^; m. Courtney Harvie, of 
Amelia Co., Va. (iv) Richard FiekF. (v) 
James Aubyn"^. (vi) Mary Byrd^. (vii) Rosa- 
lie Green''', (viii) Anne Willing^. 
Cocke. VI. Susan Anne-^Cocke. VII. Mary Chastain'^ 
Cocke. VIII. Omeron^Cocke. These d. young. 

IX. James Everett^ Cocke. X and XI. Frances 
and Richard Cocke, Twins^, d. in infancy. 

XII. Mary Susan^Cocke; m. James Granville 
Boyd, of Nelson Co., Va. [Officer in C. S. A., and 
killed in battle ; Son of Rev. James and Henrietta 
Boyd. (Garland) Boyd]. Issue: i. James Granville^. 
Cocke, XIII. Richard Herbert^ Cocke, d. in infancy. 



LINE OF MARTHA^ (D.) CHASTAIN. 253 

William A^. Cocke, m. C. M. Winston Ronald, (p. 

250). Issue: 

Chapel. J William Archer^Cocke, b. May 20, 1796; d. 
Cocke. Aug. 29, 1821 ; m. Dec. 1, 1819, Catherine Murray, 

b. Nov. 10, 1798; d. Oct. 25, 1878. Issue: 

i. William Alexander^ b. Jan. 17, 1821 ; d. Sept. 
16, 1822. 

ii. William Archer*^ ; Author of valuable works 
on Constitutional Law, etc; Attorney-General 
of Florida; b. May 10, 1822; m., Apr. 5, 1853, 
Kate Parkhill, b, Aug. 26, 1826. No issue. 
XL Chastain^ Cocke, b. Jan. 26, 1798; d. Oct. 1, 

1798. 

III. Martha Judith^Cocke, b. Sept. 26, 1799; d. 

Feb. 24, 1859 ; m., "Comoton", Powhatan Co., Va., 

Sept 20, 1820, Everard Francis Eggleston, b. July 

6, 1798; d. June 6, 1857. Issue: 
^gsj^es- i^ Judith% b. Oct. 24, 1821; d. Oct. 29, 1821. 
ii. Catherine*'', b. and d. Julv, 1823. 
iii. Joseph^ b. Dec. 27, 1827; d. Sept. 27, 1846. 
iv. William Archer*^; Served through the Civil 
War in the C. S. A. ; b. Mar., 1831. 
V. Martha Judith^, b. Feb. 4, 1835 ; m., "Eggles- 
titton,'' Amelia Co., Va., Apr. 18, 1860, William 
Old, Jr., of Powhatan Co., Va., who resigned as 
Editor of the "Richmond Examiner" to enter 
the C. S. A. 
Cocke. IV. Rebecca Bently^ Cocke, b. Feb. 5, 1801; d. 

Aug., 1803. 

V. Chastain^Cocke, b. Oct. 2, 1802; d. Apr. 26, 

1860; m. 1st., Jan. 31, 1825, Sallie Meade Eggles- 

ton, b. Jan. 29, 1802 ; d. Nov. 12, 1830 ; m. 2d. Mary 

Eggleston, b. Jan. 21, 1816; d. Mar. 8, 1873. Issue 

by both marriages : 

i. Chastain"; d. Apr. 21, 1828. ii. Josephine^, 
b., 1830; d. Jan. 6, 1855; m. George William 
Hobson, of Richmond, Va., Killed in Battle, 
Julv, 1864. iii. Marv Catherine^, b. Aug. 4, 
1838; d. June 12, 1840. iv. Chastain«, b. Feb. 
9, 1840; Soldier in C. S. A. v. Bettie Chaffing 



254 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Ransom. 



Cocke. 



Wynn. 



Cocke. 



Wynn. 



William A*. Cocke, m. C. M. Winston Ronald, (p. 
250). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. b. Mar. 21, 1842; m. Dec. 6, 1877, Luther Ran- 
som. Issue : 

(i) Ronald Augustine^ b. Jan. 21, 1882. (ii) 

Mary Eggleston^. 
vi. Catherine Archer'', b. Nov. 9, 1843; d. Aug. 
6, 1848. vii. Edward Eggleston*', b. May 2, 
1845; d. July 24, 1869. viii. Mary Eggleston^ 
b. May 7, 1847; m. Feb. 28, 1871. Robt. E. Wynn. 
Issue : 

(i) Bessie Eggleston^, b. July 30, 1873; d. May 

19, 1877. (ii) Mary Eppes^ b. Jan. 28, 1875; 

d. Aug. 11, 1882. (iii) Norah Meade^, b. Aug. 

23, 1877. 

ix. Helen Martha^, b. Sept. 15, 1849. x. Sallie 
Meade^ b. Aug. 10, 1855; m. William Thomas 
Wynn. Issue : 

(i) Judith Maria^ b. Oct. 1, 1876. (ii) Helen 

Archer^ b. Aug. 15, 1877. 

(Iv) Emma cO^ ^"^^ 1' 1^82; d. June. 1882. 
VI. Mary Magdalene Chastain^ Cocke, b. Feb. 2, 
1807; d. May 17, 1880; m. James Ligon Saunders; 
d. Nov. 5, 1871. Issue: 

i. William James''; Member of Powhatan Ar- 
tillery, C. S. A., and served through the War; 
b. Dec. 9, 1846; m. Pattie Richardson, of Bal- 
lard Co., Ky., b. Jan. 13, 1850; d. Apr. 2, 1883. 
Issue : 
(i) James Ligon^ b. Oct. 29, 1873; d. Aug. 4, 
1874. 

(ii) Mary William^ b. Apr. 23, 1875. (iii) 
Frederick Courtney^ b. July 19, 1878. 

Elizahcth R.^Cocke, m. Joseph Royall, (p. 250). 

Issue: 

Royall. I. Joseph Albert^ Royall, m. Mary Boiling Weisi- 
ger, of Manchester, Va. Issue: 

i. Elizabeth Cocke^, d. young, ii. Aubyn 



Cocke. 



Saun- 
ders. 



LINE OF MARTHA^ (D.) CHASTAIN. 255 

Elizabeth R.^Cocke, m. Joseph Royall (p. 250). 

Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. Archer^, burned to death, iii. Mary Alice^. iv. 
Royall. Sarah Seignora^, m. George Webb. v. Elizabeth 
Cocke*^, m. John Wallace Powell, of Richmond, 
Va. Issue: 
Powell. ( i ) George Webb^, m. Dr. Lacklan Tyler. ( Son 

of John Tyler, President of U. S.) 
( ii ) John Munf ord Gregory^, d. in infancy, 
(iii) Bessie Walace^. (iv) Thomas Walace^. 
(v) Mary Archer^, m. Asliton Todd. (Son of 
Rev. Todd, of the Protestant Episcopal Church 
of Maryland.) (vi) William Price^. 
Royall. vi. William Segar Archer^, m. Eliza J. Chris- 
tian, of Richmond, Va. Issue: 
(i) Mary Aubyn^. (ii) John PowelF. (iii) 
George Willie Powell^. 

(iv) William Archer^, vii. John Albert^, 
viii. Richard RendalP, Killed in C. S. A. 

John F^. (Jocke, m. Anne W. Ronald, (p. 250). 

rJ... i/: H'r.'^Q^ ..&■ \ tissue: ^i-.f^^ -.. ...:Pk 

■■■'■■•.■- J- 

Cocke. I. Richard Ivanhoe^Cocke; Commonwealth's At- 
torney of Fluvanna Co., Va. ; Member of House of 
Delegates of Virginia, and of the Virginia Conven- 
tion, 1850-51; Entered C. S. A. as Lieutenant of 
the Powhatan Artillery, but had to resign because 
of feeble health ; b. Aug. 13, 1820 ; d. Aug. 30, 1873 ; 
m., Richmond, Va., Fannie Allen Ellis, b. May 26, 
1827; [Daughter of Charles and Margaret K. 
(Nimmo) Ellis]. Issue: 

i. John Field«, b. Feb. 7, 1849 ; m. Oct. 29, 1873, 
in Blandville, Ballard Co., Ky., Laura A. Hite, 
b. July 28, 1853 ; d. Jan. 8, 1886. Issue : 
(i) Anna Allen", b. July 23, 1874; d. August 
6, 1874. 

(ii) Richard r. ) b. July f d. Apr. 17, 1878. 
(iii) George W^. i 31, 1877 1 d. May 1, 1878. 
(iv) Infanf^, d. at birth. 



I 

256 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. ^ -& 



H 



■L^, 
^ 



John F^. Cocke, m. Anne W. Ronald, (p. 250) 

Issue — Con tinned : * 

Chap. III. ii- Son'', d., "Clover Pasture", Powhatan Co., ^^ 
5^^ Va., at birth, Sept., 1862. ** -'-^ 

11. Rowena Glowina^Cocke, b. Jan. 1, 1823; d. 
Mar. 17, 1861; m. Joseph Wade Royall, d., 1866. • 
Royaii. Issue : i. Ann Elizabeth^, b. Feb. 29, 1857 ; d. May .<^» J\ 

7, 1877. ii. Rowena Glowina^ b. Sept. 12, 1859. "^^ | 
Cocke. Ill- William Ronald^Cocke; Unable to serve in ^. f 
the C. S. A., was detailed to raise provisions for it; ^^ 
After the War, was judi?e of Fluvanna Co., Va., *^%* 
until his death; b. Aug.l8, 1824; d. Mar 24, 1875; .^ ^ 
m., "Red Hills", Fluvanna Co., Va., Bettie Rag- ^^ 
land Boston, b. Oct. 15, 1830. Issue : 5 | 

1. Amelia Archer'^, b. June 12, 1851; m., Oct. ^^J 
28, 1884, William Forbs Churchill. .. c- ; ^ : -r.-T' 
ii. Bettie Boston^, b. Feb. 22, 1853. iii. William 
Ronald^, b. Feb. 6, 1855. 

iv. Clarence Chastain^, b. Sept. 26, 1857. (v) 
Margaret Boston^, b. Oct. 26, 1859 
vi Rowena Glowina'^, b. July 4, 1861; m. Aug. 
22, 1883, Dabney Minor Trice, of Albemarle Co., 
Trice. Va. Issue : (i) Robert Nelson'^. 

Cocke. vii. Grace Dudley^ b. Nov. 28, 1863. viii. 
Blanche Beverly^ b. July 28, 1865. 
ix. Eloise^, b. June 21, 1867. x. Richard Ivan- 
hoe% b. Dec. 31, 1870. 
xi. Ann Waller^ b. Dec. 28, 1873. 
IV. Amelia Archer^ Cocke, b. Oct. 27, 1826; d. 
Jan. 4, 1849. 

Mary'^ Cocke, m. Charles Warner L. Carter, M. D. 

(p. 251). Issue: 

Carter. j j^j^ry Lewis^Carter, b. Jan. 13, 1817 ; m. Sept. 
22, 1836, John Coles Singleton, of South Carolina; 
d. Sept. 20, 1852. Issue : 
Single- i. Mary Carter^, m. Rev. Robert W. Bar7iwell, 
too- of South Carolina. Issue: 

Barnwell. (i) John Singleton''^. (ii) Robert''^. 



LINE OP MARTHAi(D.) CHASTAIN. 257 

Mary'^ Cocke, m. Charles Warner L. Carter, M. D. 
(p. 251). Issue — Continued: 
Chap. III. ii^ Rebecca Coles°, m. Hon. Alexander C. Has- 
^ton!^" kellot^.C. Issue: 
Haskell. (i) Rebecca Singleton^. 

Single- iii- Richard Randolph^, m. Annie Broome. Is- 
ton. sue: (i) Eliza^. (ii) Maria^. 

(iii) Lucy Champe^. (iv) Chas. Carter'^, (v) 
Kate'^. (vi) Rebecca Coles'^. 

iv. Charles Carter^; m. . 

V. John Coles^, m. Harriet B. . Issue: (i) 

John", (ii) Mary Carter^. 

(iii) Harriet''^. (iv) Lucy''^. 
vi. Lucy E^., m. David Hemphill, of South Car- 
olina. 
Carter. II. Lucy Smith^Carter, b, July 29, 1819 ; m. Oct. 
15, 1840, Peter Carr Minor, b. Mar. 21, 1816 ; d. Oct. 
30, 1879. Issue: 
Minor. i. Frank Hugh% b. Nov. 29, 1842; d. Oct. 11, 

1870; ii. Charles Carter^ b. Aug. 18, 1844. 
Carter. HI. Charles Everett^ Carter, b. Feb. 5, 1821; d. 
Nov. 5, 1847, in the city of Mexico. 

IV. Martha Champe^ Carter, b. Apr. 5, 1830; ra., 
Nov, 6, 1850, Moses Green Peyton; (Major in the 
C. S. A.) Issue: 
Peyton. i. Bernard'^ ; University of Virginia, A. M.; 
Medalist of the Jefferson Literary Society; 
Lawyer, Richmond, Va, ; Associate Editor with 
Wm. L. Royall of "The Commonwealth''; Gen- 
eral Counsellor of the Georgia Pacific R. R. ; 
Killed in a R. R. accident near Atlanta, Ga., 
Dec. 14, 1885. 

ii. Charles Carter^, m. Elizabeth Kendrick. iii. 
Champe Carter^. 

iv. jNIarv Carter'^', v. Julia Amanda*^, vi. Im- 
ogene*^. 

Martliu^ Cocke, m. Valcufine W. ^oKtluilJ (p. 251). 

Issue : 

Southali. I. William Henry^Southall, b. Aug. 14, 1826; m. 
Jan. 10, 1849, Bettie Allen. Issue : 



258 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 

Martha^ Cocke, m. Valentine W. Southall (p. 251). 

Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . i. Joseph Allen^, b. Apr. 5, 1854. 

Southall. ii. Lizzie Lyle®, b. Aug. 12, 1858; m. Apr. 20, 

1881, Ludolph Wilhelm Gunther, of Baltimore, 
Gunther. Md. Issue: (i) Maude CeciF, b. Feb., 1882. 
Southall. iii. Valentine% b. June 16, 1863. iv. William«, 

b. Nov. 25, 1864. 

V. Thompson Brown^, b. Dec, 1866. 

II. James Cocke^ Southall; L. L. D. ; Author and 
Scientist; Editor of "Richmond Examiner," and 
joint Editor with William T. Richardson, D. D., 
of the "Central Presbyterian" ; b. Sept. 2, 1828 ; m. 
Nov. 10, 1869, Eliza F. Sharp, b. May 28, 1836. Is- 
sue: i. James Powell Cocke^, b. Apr. 4, 1871. 

ii. Evelyn Henry^ b. Apr. 10, 1873. 

III. Stephen Valentine^ Southall; Prominent 
Lawyer of Charlottesville, Va., b. Apr. 27, 1830; 
m. Feb. 8, 1866, Emily Gordon Voss. Issue: 

i. Mary Stuart^ b. Dec, 1866. ii. Martha Cocke% 
b. Nov., 1867; iii. Emily% b. Apr., 1869; iv. Val- 
entine^, b. May, 1871. 

IV. Lucy Smith^ Southall, b. Apr. 12, 1833; m. 
Nov., 1856, Charles Sharp, of Norfolk, Va. ; b., 1828. 

Sharp. Issue: i. Florence SouthalP, b. Sept., 1857. ii. Wil- 
liam Wllloughby SouthalF, b. Oct., 1861. 

Southall. V. Mary Martha^ Southall, b. Nov. 19, 1834; m. 
1st., Apr., 1858, Col. John Thompson Brown 
(Lawyer; Confederate States Artillery, and killed 
at the battle of the Wilderness, Va., May, 1864) 
m. 2d., July, 1876, Col. Charles Scott Yenahle; (C 
S. A., and on the staff of Gen. Robert E. Lee; Pro 
fessor of Mathematics in the University of Vir 
ginia; Chairman of Faculty 1870-73.) Issue: i 

Venable. Charles*^, b., 1877. 

Southall. VI. Florence Carter^ Southall, b. Sept. 29, 1836 
d. Jan. 20, 1854. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 259 

Descendants of John James^Dupuy. 

Jolin James^Dupuy, m. Susanna Levilain (p. 179). 

Issue : 

Chap. III. I. Olympia^Dupuy, b., King William Parish, 
D^y. Va., Nov. 12, 1729 (B. R. No. 9) ; d., aged 93 yrs., 
at the home of her son, Edward Trabue, Woodford 
Co., Ky. ; m., 1744-45, John James Trabue, b., 
1722; d. Dee. 23, 1803; [Ensign in the Revolution, 
and" acquired the right of half pay, commutation 
and bounty lands under the act of Congress; Son 
of Anthony and Magdalene (Flournoy, died, Hen- 
rico Co., Va., Nov., 1731, daughter of Jacob Flour- 
noy) Trabue, born, about 1667, near Montauban, 
France, escaped to Holland, 1687, and emigrated 
to England, thence to America, and settled in 
King William Parish, Va., in 1701, where he died, 
Jan., 1724, aged about fifty-six or seven years, leav- 
ing five children — Anthony, Jacob, John James, 
Judith and Magdalene. "Antoine (Anthony) Tra- 
bue, a native of Montauban, aged about 19, of good 
size, fine carriage, dark complexion — having a scar 
under his left eye, has always professed the Re- 
formed Religion, in which his parents raised him, 
and has never committed any offense that has come 
to our knowledge, other than what the violence of 
the late horrible persecutions justified, which per- 
secutions Grod has had the kindness to stop, and 
for which he has given us reparation. We com- 
mend him to the care of Divine Providence, and to 
a cordial reception from our Brethren. Done at 
Lausanne this 15th of September, A. D., 1687." 
(Signed by the church pastors of Montauban, Lau- 
signarque, Dauphiny, Lausanne, and Beam, and 
original sheepskin parchment forwarded to Mr. A. 
E. D. Trabue of Hannibal, Mo., by Mr. Macon Tra- 
bue of Virginia, many years ago.) The manner of 
his escape from France is given in a "Memoran- 
dum" of his family history, left by his grandson, 
Daniel Trabue: "I understand that my grand- 



260 GENEALOGY WITH BKIEF SKETCHES. 

John James^Dupuy, m. Susanna Levilain (p. 119). 

Issue — Continued : 

C hap. Il l, father, Anthony Trabue, had an estate, but con- 
Dupuy. eluded he would leave it if he could possibly make 
his escape. He was a very young man and he and 
another young man took a cart, and loaded it with 
wine, and went on to sell it to the farthermost 
guard; and when night came on, they left their 
horses and cart, and made their escape to an Eng- 
lish ship, which took them on board, and they went 
to England, leaving their estates, native country, 
relatives, and everything, for the sake of Jesus who 
died for them." (Richmond Standard, May 10-19, 
1879, by R. A. Brock, Esq., Sec. Va. Hist'l Society). 
Other family tradition states that he went first to 
Holland and thence to England. In the Virginia 
Land Registry are the following records : "Anthony 
Trabue, Mar. 18, 1717, 522 acres, on the great fork 
of Swift creek; Anthony Trabue, Mar. 23, 1715, 163 
acres. South Side James river, Henrico Co., Va."; 
For many years a Church Warden, in King Wil- 
liam Parish] Page, 262 

II. Bartholomew^Dupuy, m. Mary Mottley; 
Moved to Kentucky from Amelia Co., Va. ; His 
will, giving names of his children, was dated June 
5, 1790, Woodford Co., Ky., and is still preserved by 
his descendants Page, 335 

III. Susanna^Dupuy, b.. King William Parish, 
Va., Apr. 25, 1734, (B. R. No. 18) ; d. before 1775, 
(See will of her father) ; m. James Lockett, d. later 
that 1775. Issue : 

Lockett. i. John^. ii. James^. iii. JoeP. iv. Brittain^. All 

four were legatees in their grandfather's will, 

herein recorded, but of their posterity the author 

knows nothing. - 

Dupuy. IV. Mary^Dupuy, b.. King William Parish, Va,, 

Feb. 26, 1736 (B. R. No. 23) ; m. Benjamin Hatcher, 

Issue : 

Hatcher. i. Benjamin^, ii. Susanna^. Both were born 

prior to 1775, and were legatees in their grand- 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 261 

John James^Dupuy, m. Susanna Levilain (p. 179). 

Issue — Continued: 

Chap. in. father's will. Of their posterity the author is 
ignorant. 

Dupuy. V. Rev. John^Dupuy ; The old "Dupuy's Meeting 
House," a Baptist church, located in the Eastern 
part of Powhatan Co., Va., took its name from this 
man, who, during the time that its pastor, Rev. 
David Tinsley, was seized by the hand of persecu- 
tion and incarcerated in the Chesterfield prison, 
was so stirred up at the forlorn condition of the 
church that he began first as an exhorter, and af- 
terwards entered the ministry. A few years later, 
when Mr. Tinsley gave up the charge, the church 
chose John Dupuy for its pastor, whose ministra- 
tions were blessed with a revival, in which were 
large accessions to the membership. He moved to 
Kentucky, and became a member of Clear Creek 
church, Woodford Co., in 1784. In 1801, he moved 
to Oldham Co., Ky., and joined the church at Pat- 
ton's creek; Later, he settled in Shelbyville, Ky., 
but by request of the members of the Patton's 
creek church, he retained his membership therein 
until his death : Author of letter beginning p. 16?> ; 
b.. King William Parish, Va., Mar. It, 1738, (B. R. 
No. 27) ; d., Shelbyville, Ky., Sept. 7, 1831; m. Eliz- 
abeth Minter, b. Sept. 27, 1756; d. Jan. 3, 

1838 Page, 351 

VI. Elizabeth^Dupuy, b., King William Parish, 
Va., Sept. 4, 1740 (B. R. No. 29) ; married late in 
Atkin- life Thomas Atitmsow. Issue: 

son. i. John^. ii. Nancy^. iii. Patsy^. 

Dupuy. ^^11- ^^^' James^Dnpuy (Baptist) ; Emigrated 
from Powhatan Co., Va., to Kentucky, about 1786 
and joined Clear creek church, Oldham Co.; Later, 
united in forming Buck Run church, whose build- 
ing is now a handsome brick structure, located in 
Finchville, Ky. ; and still later was connected with 
Bethel church, both in Shelbv Co.; b., Kins: Wil- 
liam Parish, Va., Jan. 29, 1745 (B. R. No. 32) ; d. 



262 GENEALOGY WITH BKIEF SKETCHES. 

John James^Dupuy, m. Susanna Levilain fp. 179). 

Issue — Continued : 

Chap. m. May 5, 1837; m., Oct. 16, 1776, Anne Starke; d. 
Dupuy. June 11, 1833; (Daughter of Major John Starke 

of Va.) Page 357 

VIII. Martha^Dupuy, b., King William Parish, 

Va., May 21, 1747 (B. R. No. 35) ; m. James Foster. 

Foster. Issue: i. George^, ii. Susanna^, iii. Mary^. Legatees 

in their grandfather's will. No further trace of 

them. 

Olympiad Dupuy, m. John J. Trdbue, (p. 259). 

Issue: 

Trabue. I. James^ Trabue; Commissary General in the 
Revolution, in the Department of Kentucky, and 
was taken prisoner at Ruddel's Station, and held 
at Montreal for more than a year, when he made 
his escape; Surveyor with Daniel Boone; His com- 
pass, which he buried, was long years afterwards 
plowed up, and is now in the hands of one of his 
descendants ; b. Jan. 29, 1746 ; d. Dec. 23, 1803 ; m., 
1782, Jane E. Porter, b. about 1756; d. Mar. 17, 
1830; (Daughter of Robert Porter, a Scotchman). 

.' Page, 266 

II. Magdalene^Trabue, b., 1748; d., 1815; m. Ed- 
ward Clay, Uncle of Hon. Henry Clay; Moved to 
North Carolina. Issue: 
Clay. i. John^. ii. Samuel^, iii. Martha^, iv. James*. 

V. Francis^, vi. Judith^, vii. Mary*, viii. Phoe- 
be*, ix. Edward*, x. Sarah*. 
Trabue. III. Phoebe^Trabue, b., 1750; d., 1767. 

IV. Jane^^Trabue, b. Jan. 12, 1752; d., 1802; m. 
Rev. Joseph Minter (Baptist), b. Mar. 19, 1754; 
d., 1814; (Son of Joseph Anthony Minter; Author 
of the hymn, beginning, "O Lord of hosts, my God 
and King," published in "Dupuy's Hymns."). 
They moved from Virginia to Woodford Co. Ky. 
. . . ." Page, 269 

V. John^Trabue; Commissary General in the 
Revolution under Gen. George Rogers Clark ;b. Mar. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 263 

Olympia'^Dupuy , m. John J. Trabue, (p. 259). 

Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. 17, 1754; d., Logan's Fort, Ky., 1788; m. 

Trabue. l^^arce. 

VI. William^Trabue ; Soldier in the Revolution 
in Virginia, and served to the close of the War; 
Received bounty land of 200 acres; b. Mar. 13, 
1756; d. Mar. 2, 1786; m. Feb. 12, 1783, Elizabeth 
Haskins, b. Sept. 29, 1759; d. Oct. 10, 1825; 
[Daughter of Col. Robert and Betsy (Hill) Has- 
kins] Page, 284 

VII. Mary-Trabue, b., Chesterfield Co., Va., Feb. 
26, 1758; d., Woodford Co., Ky., 1792; m., Mar. 5, 
1779, Lewis Sublett (his 1st. wife), b., Chesterfield 
Co., Va., 1759; d., Woodford Co., Ky., 1830; [Sol- 
dier in the Revolution, was at the siege of York- 
town, and the surrender of Cornwallis; Son of 
Lewis and Frances (McGruder, of Chesterfield Co., 
Va.) Sublett, b. Apr. 9, 1728, d., Chesterfield Co., 
Va., 1802, m., 1749; Son of Peter Lewis and Mar- 
tha (Martin) Sublett, b., Germany, 1689, d., Cum- 
berland Co., Va., 1754, m., 1723; Son of Abraham 
and Susanna (Dupuy, d.. King William Parish, 
Va., 1710) Sublett, who escaped from France to 
Germany, 1685, with their sons, Abraham and 
James, thence they went to Holland, where their 
daughter, Anne, was born, (d. King William Par- 
ish, Va., April, 1723, having married Peter Chas- 
tain), and thence to Littleberry, England, where 
their youngest son, Littleberry, was born. Abra- 
ham Sublett with his sons, Abraham and James, 
left London, Mar. 24, 1700, on the ship, "Mary 
Ann", commanded by Capt. Homes, and arrived at 
Jamestown, Va., June 23, 1700. His wife and the 
other children, Peter Lewis, Littlebury, and Anne, 
whom he left in England, arrived at Jamestown, 
Va., Sept. 20, 1700, in the ship, "Ye Peter and 
Anthony", Galley of London, commanded by Capt. 
Daniel Perreau. They settled in King William 
Parish, Va. The land which they settled is still 



264 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Olympia^Dupuy, m. John J. Trahue, (p. 259). 

Issue — Continued: 

Chap. Ill, known as "Sublett's Post Office". Seven of the 
Trabue. Virginia Subletts were in tiie Richmond Howit- 
zers, C. S. A. Those descendants who went West 
were early Pioneers of the Country, and became 
noted Indian fighters] . Lewis Sublett and his wife, 
Mary Trabue, moved to Fayette (now W^oodford) 
Co., Ky., in 1782, and shortly after their arrival, 
he, with thirty other men, went to the relief of the 
inmates of Bryan's Station, which was attacked by 
the Indians. On their arrival, the Indians had re- 
treated, whom they pursued, and gaining the first 
sight of them on the opposite bank of Licking river, 
they crossed the stream, dismounted and attacked 
them, but were badly defeated. In their flight, they 
lost their horses, several officers, and a number of 
men Page, 289 

VIII. DaniePTrabue ; Captain in the Revolu- 
tion; b. Mar. 31, 1760; d., 1840; m. Mary Haskins; 
[Daughter of Col. Robt. and Betsy (Hill) Has- 
kins] " Page 297 

IX. Martha3( Patsy) Trabue, b., 1762; m. Jo- 
siah Wooldridge Page, 298 

X. Edward^Trabne ; Soldier in the Resolution, 
was at Gate's Defeat, and the battle of Guilford, 
N. C; b., 1764; d., about 1820; m. 1st., Martha 
Haskins; [Daughter of Col. Robt. and Betsy (Hill) 

Haskins ;] Page, 301 

m. 2d., 1797, Jane E. Clay, b. Jan. 1, 1776 ; d., Ralls 
Co., Mo., June 8, 1845, at the residence of her son- 
in-law, Taylor Jones. (Daughter of Rev. Eliazar 
Clay, son of James, son of Charles, brother of Hon. 
Henry Clay). Descendants settled mostly in Mis- 
souri Page, 303 

XI. Stephen^Trabue, b., 1766 ; d., 1833 ; m. July 
24, 1788, Jane Haskins; d., 1833. [Daughter of Col. 
Robt. and Betsv (Hill) Haskins] Page, 318 

XII. Elizabeth^Trabue, b. Feb. 27, 1768 ; d. Aug. 
6, 1835; m, Apr. 14, 1794, Fenelon R. Willson, b., 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 265 

Olympiad D upuy , in. John J. Trabue, (p. 259). 

Issue — Continued : 

C hap. II I. England, Feb. 14, 1768 ; d., about 1838. . . Page, 324 
Trabue. XIII. SamuePTrabue, b., 1770; d. aged 7 years. 

XIV. Susanna^Trabue; Legatee in her grand- 
father's will; b., 1772; d. Jan. 24, 1862; m. Apr. 17, 
1793, Thomas Major, b. Dec. 25, 1769 ; d., Franklin 
Co., Ky., May 6, 1846. 
"State of Missouri, \ „ „ 
County of Saline, j ' * 

On this day of Eighteen Hundred and 

fifty-six, personally appeared before me, a justice of 
the peace, within and for the county aforesaid, Su- 
sanna Majors, aged years, a resident of Saline 

county in the State of Missouri, who being duly 
sworn according to law declares that she is the 
widow of Thomas Majors deceased who was a pri- 
vate in the company commanded by General Scott 
of Kentucky Militia one month; and was also in 
Capt. Barbee's company in the regiment com- 
manded by General Wilkerson three months, es- 
corting provisions to different Block Houses or 
Fortifications in the war between the United States 
and the Indians of the Northwest Territory; that 
her said husband volunteered in the spring of 1792 
and served under Gen. Scott, again volunteered and 
served under Gen. Wilkerson in the same year and 
continued in actual service about 4 months, part of 
said time on the Wabash river, and know not 
whether he got discharge or not. She further states 
that she was married to the said Thomas Majors in 
Woodford Co., Ky., on the 17th day of April 1793 
by one James Dupuy, a Baptist Preacher, and that 
her name before her marriage was Susanna Trabue, 
that her hu.sband died in Franklin Co., Ky., the 6th 
day of May 1846, and that she is now a widow. She 
makes this declaration for the purpose of obtaining 
the Bounty Land to which she may be entitled un- 
der the act approved March 3, 1855. 

We, and residents of 



266 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Olympiad Dupuy, m. John J. Trabue, (p. 259). 

Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . Saline county in the state of Missouri upon our 
Trabue. oaths declare that the foregoing declaration was 
signed and acknowledged in our presence by Susan- 
na Major and that we believe from the appearance 
and statements of the applicant that she is the iden- 
tical person she represents herself to be. 

The foregoing declaration and affidavit were 
sworn to and subscribed before me on the day and 
year above written and I certify that I know the 
affiants to be credible persons, that the claimant is 
the person she represents herself to be and that I 
have no interest in the claim. J. P." 
(Copy furnished by A. T. Gunnell, Attorney, Color- 
ado Springs, Colo. ) Page, 329 

XV. Judith^Trabue, b, 1774; m. John Major. 
Settled in Illinois Page, 334 

James^Tralue, m. Jane E. Porter, (p. 262). Issue: 

I. Judith^Trabue, m. George Ewing. 

II. Mary^Trabue, m. William T. Scott. Issue: 
Scott. i. Olympia Dupuy^, d. aged 16 yrs. 

ii. John^, m. Pullam, of Owingsville, Ky.; 

moved to Carthage, Mo., and thence to Fannin 

Co., Tex. iii. George^, M. D., m. Lindsey; 

Settled in Carthage, Mo. 
Trabue. HI. Elizabeth^Trabue, m. Chastain Trabue, (p. 
318). 

IV. Martha T. ^Trabue, m., about 1822, Archer 
King. Issue: 
King. i. Mary Ann^, m., 1846, William Snyder, of Mil- 
ton, Ky. Issue : ( i ) John®, ii. Amanda Fran- 
ces^, d. young, iii. Eliza Jane^, m. 8ul- 

sui- lenger, M. D., of Woodford Co., Ky. Issue: (i) 

lenger. Mattie®, m. Perham. Issue 10. iv. Susan 

M^, m. Hall. 

Trabue. V. Robert^Trabue ; d. about 1830 ; m., 1810, Mary 
Grimes, (niece of Thomas Garrett), of Bourbon 
Co., Ky., b., 1795; d., 1865. Issue: 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 267 



James^Trabue, m. Jane E. Porter, (p. 262). Issue — 

Co7itinued: 

C hap. II I. i. Stephen^, d. in infancy, ii. Franklin^, d. in 
Trabue. infancy, iii. James'% b., 1812; d. 1864. Never 
married, iv. DanieP, b., 1814 ; d., Nov. 27, 1897, 
in Mississippi. Never married, v. Edward^, b,, 
1816; d., 1865; m., 1847, Sarah McGuidey, ot 
Lancaster, Mo. Issue : 
(i) Mary^. (ii) Martha^, (iii) Edward^, (iv) 

Andrew^, (v) David Lee^, m. Mrs. of 

California, (vi) Julia Canna^, m. . 

vi. Julia Anna^, b. Feb. 15, 1818; d., 1844; m., 
1834, William Fades. Issue : 
(i) Amanda L*'., b., 1835; m, 1st., 1855, George 
Weller, of Louisville, Ky., d., 1858. Issue: 1 
Harry^, m. 2d. J. T. Johnston, of Lagrange, Mo 
Issue : 

2. Maggie', d. in infancy. 3. Abbie'^, m. 

4. John T^, m. . Issue: (1) Son^. 5. C 

Oscar'^. 

(ii) Annie M^, b. Dec. 8, 1837; d. May 9, 1888; 
m., 1856, T. L. Durkee, of Canton, Mo., b. about 
1834. Issue : 

1. Alice'^, m. Clark, of Hannibal, Mo. 

2. Henry ^, m. Morris. 

(iii) Robert Oscar*^, b. July 7, 1841; m. Martha 
Ow, of Lancaster, Mo. Issue: Two. 

(iv) William Granville^ b. May 2, 1843. Never 

married. 

(v) Edwin S«., M. D., b. Oct. 11, 1844; d. Nov. 

12, 1871, at Bledsoe Landing, Ark. 

Trabue. vii. William^ b., 1820; d., 1849; m., 1842, . 

— Beaslev. 



Eades. 
Weller. 



Johnston. 
Eades. 

Durkee. 
Eades. 



Issue: (i) Elizabeth T^., m. — 

viii. Robert^ b., 1822; d., 1864; m., 1854 ^ . 

ix. Lavinia^ ; Educated at Paris and George- 
town, Ky. ; b., Bourbon Co., Ky., Feb. 22, 1824; 
d., 1907 ;m., Oct. 9, 1845, W. H. Eades, b. Oct. 29, 
1809 ; d., Schuyler Co., Mo., July 3, 1872. They 
lived near St. Louis, Mo. : Moved to Canton, Mo., 
where Mr. Eades merchandised for years and 



268 GENEALOGY WITH BKIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. II I. 
Trabue. 



Eades. 



Cannon. 
Eades. 

Moore. 



Eades. 
Means. 

Eades. 



James^Trahue, m. Jane E. Porter, (p. 262). Issue — 

Continued: 

educated liis children; and thence to Schuyler 
Co., Mo.; Mrs. Eades, who furnished most of 
this family register, expressed the following 
beautiful sentiment in one of her letters, which 
is recorded as a heritage to her posterity : "I am 
seventy-six years old, and try to do the best I 
can for myself and many others, knowing I have 
not many years to do for myself or anyone else. 
I want to prepare to live and to prepare to die, 
and be ready when I am called from time to 
eternity. AYhen I rise of a morning, I want to 
rise to walk in newness of life, day by day, for 
Jesus' sake." Issue: (i) Malcom*^, b. Aug. 3, 
1846; d., 1852. 
(ii) C. H^, b. Aug. 6, 1848; m. Mary Briggs, 
of Lynngrove, Mo. Issue: 4. 
(iii) Sallie Henrietta*^, b. Feb. 14, 1850; m., 

18, 1875, Newton Cannon, of St. Louis, 

Issue: l.Grace\ 2. Lottie^. 

Julia^ b. Jan. 13, 1853 ; m. Nov. 3, 1875, 

Moore, of Glenwood, Mo. 
1. Daughter^ m. Ve Porter, of New- 



Trabue. 



Aug. 
Mo. 
(iv) 
E. B. 
Issue 

ark. Mo. Issue (1) Daughter^. 
2. Samuel". 3. Julia'^. 

(v) Mary^ b. Jan. 19, 1856; m., Oct. 25, 1877, 
B. V. Meaiis, Jeweller of Quincy, 111. Issue : 1. 
Edith^. 2. Annie^. 

(vi) George A^, b. June 27, 1858; d., 1860. 

(vii) Joseph L^, b. Jan 30, 1864; m., Dec. 24, 

1885, Mary B. Johnson, of Palmyra Mo. Issue : 

1. Joseph^. 2. Julia PauF. 3. Myrtle^. 4. 

Pansy'''. 

X. Charles^, b., 1827; Killed 1864 in battle of 



Civil War: m, 



, 1827; 
1846, - 



Issue ; 



(i) Edward^, (ii) Stephen^ (iii). William^ 

(iv) Nannie^, m. . 

(v) Mattie^, m. W. B. Thompson, Clerk of 
Winchester Co. 111. Issue : 3. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMEgiDUPUY. 269 

James^Dupuy, m. Jane E. Porter, (p. 262). Issue — 

Continued: 

ChapjiL VI. James^Trabue, b., Charlotte Co., Va., Apr. 

Trabue. 24, 1791 ; Moved to Kentucky, with his mother and 

family, 1807; Commanded the Militia of Bourbon 

Co., Ky., for years; d. Feb. 22, 1874 ; m. 1st. Judith^ 

Wooldridge (his cousin p. 299). Issue: 

i. Martha Jane° ; d. aged 4 yrs. ii. Elizabeth^ ; 

d. aged 20 yrs. 
He married 2d Lucy Dupuy^Cosby (p, 276). 
Issue : 

iii. John^ b. May 1, 1842 ; d. Jan. 18, 1892. 

iv. William Anthony^ b. Feb. 20, 1844 ; d. Aug. 

6, 1866. V. Mary Elvira^ b. Apr. 26, 1846; d. 

Aug. 6, 1875. vi. Sarah Ellen^ b. Nov. 28, 184S. 

vii. Georoe W^, b. Feb. 22, 1851; d. June 23, 

1883. viii. Olympia Dupuy% b. May 1, 1853; d. 

May 23, 1884. Ix. Henrietta^ b June 13, 1855; 

d., Charlotte Harbor, Fla., May 25, 1886. 

Jane^Trahue, m. Rev. Joseph Minter, (p. 262). 

Issue: 

Minter. 1. James^Minter, b. Jan. 29, 1776; d. young. 

II. Nancy^Minter, b. Jan 9, 1777; m. Joseph 
Watkins; (Soldier in the War of the Revolution) 

Page, 272 

III. Elizabeth^Minter,' b.' July 21, 1778; m. 
James ]Major Page, 273 

IV. Judith^Minter, b. Sept. 28, 1779; m. James 
Goiv. Issue : 

Gow. i. Emily^; m. 1st. Minter. Issue: (i) 

Son*', m Issue several. 

Minter. (ii) Daughter^. M. 2d Benjamin Nelson. Is- 
Neison. sue : (iii) William^, (iv) Annie®. 
Minter. V. Jane^Minter, b. Mar. 6, 1781; m. Benjamin 
Watkins, b. Oct. 1, 1775; (Son of Joseph Wat- 
kins) Page, 274 

VI. Sarah^Minter, b. Aug. 13, 1782 ; d. Oct., 1859, 
at the residence of her daughter, Mrs. Lucy D. Tra- 



270 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 

Jmie^Trabue, m. Rev. Joseph Minter, (p. 262). 

Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. bue, Bourbon Co., Ky; m. Apr. 10, 1810, William 
l^^r H. Cosby; d. Oct. 30, 1859 Page, 276 

VII. John Trabue^Minter, b. May 16, 1784; m. 
Elizabeth Scarce. Issue: i. Benjamin Franklin^. 

ii. Henrietta^, m. Owens. Issue: (i) 

Catherine*^, (ii) Anne*^. iii. Jeptha^, m. Lav- 
inia Minor. Issue: (i) John Mills'^, iv. George^; 

d. . V. George^, m. 1st., C. Dickey ; m. 2d. L. 

Ware. Issue: (i) William^, (ii) Sarah*^, m. 

House. Issue : 1. Zella''^. ( iii ) James T^. 

(iv) Eugenia C®. (v) Leonidas^. (vi) Thomas 
S*^. (vii) Anna S*^. (viii) Arthur^. (ix) 
Percy®. 

vi. Jane^, m. Lowry. Issue: (i) John^. 

(ii) Jane®, (iii) Elizabeth®. 

vii. Martha^, m. Key. Issue: (i) Minter 

Key. p6. (ii) Wellington®, (iii) Walter®. 

(iv) John F®. (v) Fannie®, (vi) Mattie A«. 

(vii) Mary E®. (viii) Maggie®, (ix) Annetta®. 

Minter. yiii. Margaret^, m. Terry. Issue: (i) 

Catherine®. 

VIII. William^Minter, b. Dec. 16, 1785 ; d. about 
1863; m. Elizabeth Green Waggoner; d., 1844. They 
moved from Columbia, Ky., to Columbia, Tenn. . . 
Page, 277 

IX. Martha^Minter, b. Apr. 14, 1787; d. Dec. 11, 
1860; m., Jan. 29, 1811, Peter Gregory (2d. mar- 
riage), b., Virginia, May 8, 1767 Page, 283 

X. Joseph^Minter, b. June 17, 1789 ; d., 1833 ; m. 
Elizabeth Ann Cosby. Issue: 

i. Martha Ann^ ; m., Oct. 2, 1834, Rev. Robert 
G. Rowland, (Baptist), b. Nov. 28, 1811. Issue: 
Rowland. (i)Mary E®., b. Aug. 6, 1835; m. T. J. Pilcher. 

(ii) Louisa®, b. Jan. 15, 1837; m. J. L. Rob- 
bins. 

(iii) Martha J®., b. May 16, 1839; m. 1st., Dec. 
22, 1858, G. L. Knight. Issue : 
Knight. 1. William P^., b. Oct. 29, 1860. 2. Caroline 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 271 

Jane^Trahue, m. Rev. Joseph Minter, (p. 262). 

Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. C^., b. Apr. 29, 1862. 3. Grant L^., b. Jan. 

Knight. 20, 18C4; m. Florence Hudson. Issue: (1) 

Henry Hudson^. (2) Joseph^. 4. Franklin 

D'., b. Feb. 22, 1866. She«m. 2d. J. S. Mizner. 

Issue: 5. John S^ 

Minter. ii. william% b. July 18, 1841; d. young, iii. Ben- 

jamin^. iv. Caroline^. 

V. Jobn^. vi. Joseph^, m. . Issue: Several. 

XI. Tabitba^Minter, b. Feb. 9, 1791; m. William 
H. Pittman, b. Apr. 8, 1790; (Long a drygoods mer- 
chant in Columbia, Ky., whose interests he greatly 
advanced ) . Issue : 
Pittman. i. Angeline^, b., 1822; m. Thomas E. Gregory 

(p. 283). ii. Eva^d. . 

Minter. XII. Anthony^Minter, b. Dec. 1, 1792 ; m. Eliza- 
beth Kerr. 

XIII. James^Minter, b. Mar. 14, 1794 ; m. . 

XIV. Jeremiah A.-'Minter, b. June 23, 1796; m. 
Sallie McDowell. Issue: 

i. Ann M^., m. Alexander Lamdin Slayback. 
Issue: 
Slay- (i) Alonzo William®; Colonel in the C. S. A.; 

back. Author and Poet; Lawyer in St. Louis, Mo; 

Delegate from the Second Congressional Dis- 
trict of Missouri to the Democratic Presiden- 
tial Convention, in 1876 ; First Vice President 
for two terms, of the Bar Association of St. 
Louis, Mo., 1879-81; Twice President of the 
Law Library Association of St. Louis, Mo. ; b., 
Marion Co., Mo., July 4, 1838; d., St. Louis, 
Mo., Oct. 13, 1882; m., Apr. 14, 1859, Alice A. 
Waddell. Issue : 
1. Susie^. 2. Minnette^. 3. Katie^. 4. MabeF. 
5. Grace'^. 6, Alonzo'^. 

(ii) Charles E®., m. Newman, (iii) Pres- 
ton®, (iv) Minnie®, m. Bond. 

Minter. ii. Magdalene'', m. Kidd. iii. Mary S''. m. 



272 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Chap. III. 
Minter. 



Jane^Trabue, m. Rev. Joseph Minter, (p. 262). 

Issue — Continued : 

Hife. iv. Marshall^, v. Sarah Jane^. vi. 



Watkins. 



Smith. 



Ellen^. A'ii. Bertholde^. yiii. Susan^. 
l^ancy^Minter, m. Joseph Watkins, (p. 269). Issue: 

I. Jacob^ Watkins. 

II. Lucy Ann^Watkins, b., 1802; m. Abelard 
Temple Smith, h., Culpeper Co., Va., 1799; d., 
Chambersburgh, 111., Mar. 11, 1846. Issue: 

i. William Gray^, b., 1823; d. 1873, m. Temper- 
ance Mason, b., 1833. Issue: 
(i) Oscar^ b., 1857; m. Hellen Ham, b., 1858. 
Issue: 1. W'illiams, b., 1879 ; m. Alta Hill. Is- 
sue: (1) Carl Rodney^ b., 1898. (ii) Isabella^ 
m. Albert Stinson. Issue: 1. Edna^. (iii) 
Franklin^ b., 1860; d., 1880. 
ii. Joseph Watkins^ b., 1825; m., 1880, H. R. 
Handy, b,, 1844. Issue: 
(i) Maude L^., b., 1881. (ii) Richard Edward% 
b., 1888. 
iii, Walter Abelard®, m. Lucinda Lindsey. Issue : 

(i) William^; d. . (ii) Lucy Ann^, d. . 

(iii) Edward'^, d. . (iv) Jenetta'^, d. . 

iv. Martha Minter®, m. Olive Lemon, v. Car- 
oline®, d. . 

vi. Almira®, m. 1st. Theile. No issue; m. 



Harking. 
Smith. 



Beaner. 



2d. Leander Smith. Issue 
(i) Joseph WhitfiekF, m. 



Issue; 1. Rav- 



mond^. (ii) Charles S"^., m. Lula Gillies. Is- 
sue: 1. Dwight^. 2. Verna^. 
vii. Eliza Emily®, m. Richard HarJdng. Issue: 

(i) Charles^, d. . (ii) Elizabeth'^, m. James 

Sinith. Issue 1. Lula^. 
viii. Mary Elizabeth®, m. William A. Beaner, 
b., Roane Co., Tenn., Dec, 1825; d., Perry, 111., 
Jan. 13, 1874. Issue: (i) Averett^ 

(ii) Lois Frances^, m. John Downing Johnson. 

Issue : 1. Jno. Downing^. 

(iii) HerscheF, m. Katie Hinkbey. Issue: 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 273 

Nancy^Minter, m. Joseph Watkins, (p. 269). Issue 

— Continued: 

Chapjii. 1. Marie^. 2. Zelma^ 3. Averett^. 4. Richard^, 

Beaner. d. . 

Smith. IX. Rebecca^; m. . 

Elizabeth^M inter, m. James Major, (p. 269). Issue: 

Major. I. Thomas^ Major; d., 1895. Never married. 

II. Benjamin^Major, m. Sallie Leftwich. Issue: 
i. Sallie^. ii. Benjamin^, iii. Lelia"^. iv. Emma^. 

III. Joseph^Major; d. Mar. 29, 1872; m. Jane 
Boone. Issue: 

i. Boone^ b. Dec. 19, 1825; m. Dec. 12, 1849, 
Prudence Warder. 

ii. Alfred^ b. Sept. 13, 1828. Never married, 
iii. Lucien% b. Sept. 22, 1831; m. Feb. 10, 1853, 
Sarah Ridge. Issue: 
(i) William H^, b. July 24, 1854; m. Aug. 20, 
1871, Susan Taylor. Issue: 
1. Lucien S^., b. Mar. 17, 1878. 2. Virgie^, b. 
Sept. 1, 1879. 3. Thomas^, b. Feb. 6, 1883. 
4. George^, b. Apr. 26, 1886. 5. Willie^, b. Apr. 
13, 1888. 6. MaryS, b. Feb. 2, 1890. 
(ii) Mai-y E'., b. Apr. 6, 1858; m. Nov. 22, 
1883, John J. Conlon. Issue: 
Conlon. 1. John Major^, b. Jan. 28, 1885. 2. Marv^, b. 

Feb. 28, 1888. 3. Joseph^, b. Apr. 21, i892. 
4. Sarah^, b. June 28, 1895. 
Major. (iii) Lucien S^, b. Dec. 21, 1860; m. Feb. 12, 

1895, Olevia Gregory. Issue : 
1. Susanna M^^ b. Dec. 20, 1895. 2. Thomas 
Qs., b. Nov. 28, 1896. 
3. Minors, b. May 13, 1901. 
(iv) Weightman^ b. Mar. 9, 1862; m. Nov. 
30, 1887, Harriet Mohon. Issue : 
1. Frank^, b. July 26, 1890. 2. Harry^ b. July 
28, 1899. 3. Hdllies, b. Feb. 8, 190L 
(v) Isaac R^., b. Mav 24, 1866. 
(vi) Georgia^ b. Feb. 10, 1869; m., Nov. 30, 



274 aENEALOGY WITH BKIEP SKETCHES. 

Elizabeth^Minter, m. James Major, (p. 269). Issue 

— Continued: 

Chap. III. 1887, G. B. Mohon. Issue: 1. Catlierine^, b. 
Major. Apr. 1, 1889. 

(vii) Joseph T^., b. July 16, 1872. 
(viii) Ada H^., b. Jan. 1, 1875; m., Oct. 25, 
1898, Joseph Gregory. Issue: 
Gregory 1- Josephine^, b. Feb. 19, 1899. 

Major. (ix) Earl E^., b. Apr. 2, 1877; m., Mar. 16, 

1895, Hattie McMenomy. Issue : 
1. Helens, b. Sept. 28, 1896. 2. Georgia^, b. 
Apr. 13, 1898. 3. Sophia^, b. June 11, 1901. 
iv. Elizabeth^, b. Aug. 15, 1834 ; d. Jan. 29, 1899 ; 
m., Sept. 28, 1854, Sam'l. Benton. 
V. Agnes% b. Mar. 20, 1837; m., Aug. 9, 1855, 
Oscar Bullard. 

vi. Joseph B®., b. Mar. 12, 1839; m., Apr. 13, 
1873, Louisa Hord. 

vii. Catherine% b. Mar. 9, 1844; d. Aug. 29, 
1899; m., June 11, 1873, David Bradley, M. D. 
viii. John^. ix. Mary®. 

IV. James^Major; d. Aug. 25, 1885; m. Kate Al- 
len. Issue : 

i. Mary^. ii. John®, iii. Harriet®, iv. Benjamin®. 
V. James®. 

V. Jane^Major; d., 1896; m. Albert Branham. 
Branham. Issue: i. John T®. ii. Ellen®, iii. Sallie®. iv. 

Laura®, v. Mary®, vi. Olivia®, vii. Albert®, viii. 
Alvin®. 
Major. VI. William^Major; Killed in C. S. A., m. Aman- 
da McCarty. Issue : 

i. Ida®, ii. George®, iii. Florence®, iv. Eleanor®. 

Jane^Minter, m. Benjamin Watkins,(p. 269). Issue: 

Watkins. I. Mary^Watkins, b. Oct. 30, 1802; d. Aug. 6, 
1877; m., Oct. 30, 1825, John G. Handy, of Har- 
rodsburg, Ky. Issue: 
Handy. i. Martha Jane®., d. early womanhood, ii. Wil- 
liam®, iii. Benjamin® ; d. at college. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 275 



C hap. II I. 
Handv. 



Watkins. 



Hardin, 



Watkins. 

Carter. 

Watkins. 



Jane'^Minter, m. Benjamin Watkins, (p. 269). Issue 

— Continued: 

iv. Walter^, m. Mary Moore. Issue: (i) Son^, 

m. . Issue, four sons. 

(ii) Mattie^. (iii) Mary Amner'^, m. Wesley 
Hocker. Issue 2 sons and 2 daughters. 

V. George^ ; Served through the Civil War in C. 

S. A. under Gen. John Morgan; m. Mary . 

Issue one daughter. 

vi. Mary Elizabeth^, m. Hugh L. McElroy. 

II. Martha^ Watkins, b. Sept. 26, 1804; m. 

Luke. Issue : i. Mary J®., m. Albright. 

III. Walthus^ Watkins, b. Oct. 30, 1806; m. Mary 
Holloway. Issue : 

i. Catherine®, ii. George®, iii. John®, iv. Mar- 
tha®. V. Lizzie®, vi. Jewell®, 
vii. Caroline®, viii. Judson®. ix. Joseph®. 

IV. Benjamin F^. Watkins, b. May 22, 1808; m. 
Elvira Adkins. 

V. Jane W^. Watkins, b. Nov. 30, 1809 ; m. Phil- 
ip Gill. 

VI. James W^ Watkins, b. Apr. 16, 1811; m. 
Martha Scarce. Issue: 

. . i. Benjamin®, ii. Parker®, iii. Anna®, iv. Jen- 
nie®. V. Amelia®, vi. Susan®, 
vii. Laban®. viii. Alice®, ix. Laura®, x. Ed- 
win®. 
VII. Caroline W^^ Watkins, b. May 7, 1813 ; m. 

Parker H. Hardin, (Lawyer). Issue: 

i. Charles® ; Judge ; m. Jennie McGoflBn. Issue : 

(i) Charles^, (ii) McGoffin^. (iii) Son', 
ii. P. Walthus®; Ex. State Attorney; m. Mollie 
Salle. Issue, six. iii. Benjamin®. 

VIII. Elizabeth^Watkins, b* June 8, 1814; m. 
Isaac Carter. Issue: 

i. Benjamin®, ii, Susan®, iii, Ellen®; m. 

Luke. Issue: (i) Ethel Jean"^. 

IX. Tabitha^Watkins, b. Doc. G, 1815; m. John 
Gill. Issue: i. Philip®, ii. Ellen®. 



276 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEE SKETCHES. 

Jane^Minter, m. Benjamin Watkins,(p. 269). Issue 

— Continued: 

C hap. II I. iii. James^. iv. Sarah^. v. John^. vi. Eliza- 

Giu. beth^ vii. Alices 

Watkins. X. Annie Maria'^Watkins, b. May 21, 1817; d. 
young. 

XI. Margaret^Watkins, b. Apr. 10, 1819 ; m. 1st. 
Milton Bynam; m. 2d., A. D. Blythe. Issue by 1st. 
Bynam. m : i. Alviu^. ii. Susan^. Issue by 2d. m : 
Blythe. iii. Robert P^. iv. Mary F®., m. William W®. 
Goodwin, of Memphis, Tenn., (p. 282). 
V. Samuel Judson*^, m. Jessie E. Force. Issue : 
(i) Arnold D'., b. Sept. 15, 1880. 
(ii) Mary Forced b. Jan. 22, 1882; d. Apr. 11, 
1887. (iii) Saml. Judson^. b. June 25, 1889. 
(iv) Nellie^ b. Aug. 8, 1892. (v) Jessie^ b. 
Dec. 3, 1897. 
Watkins. ^I^- Rebecca^ Watkins, b. May 10, 1821 ; m. Wil- 
' Ham Yates. 

XIII. Susan^Watkins, b. Aug. 12, 1823 ; m. John 
Hardin. Sarclin. Issue : i. Adelia^. ii. Walter^. 

Sarah^Minter, m. William E. Cosby, (p. 269). 

Issue: 

Cosby. I. Eliza Jane^ Cosby, b. Jan. 26, 1811 ; d. Aug. 17, 
1814. 

II. Lucy Dupuy^Cosby, b. Dec. 12, 1813; d. Jan. 
18, 1892; m. James^Trabue, (p. 269). 

III. Joseph Minter^Cosby, b. Jan. 2, 1816; d. 
Feb. 16, 1817, 

IV. Mary^Cosby, b. Dec. 3, 1817; d. Dec. 31, 
1837. 

V. Elizabeth^ Cosby, b. Jan. 4, 1820; d., Louis- 
ville, Ky., Apr. 10, 1851; m. 1st., Feb, 1842, Alford 
Fox Hough; d. Aug., 1849 ; m. 2d. Philips. Is- 
sue by 1st. m : 

Hough. i. Clarence Linden^, b. Apr. 19, 1846; m., Jan. 
1, 1873, Josephine Elizabeth Lindsey, b. Oct. 1, 
1856. Issue: (i) Charles F^., b. Oct. 18, 1873. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 277 

Sarah'^M inter, m. Williarn H. Cosby, (p. 269), 

Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. (ii) Lindsey Eades^, b. June 9, 1875. (iii) 

Hough. Mary Elizabeth^, b. Aug. 8, 1877. (iv) Ernesf^, 

b. Sept. 15, 1879. (v) Ida Bassett^ b. Apr. 25, 

1882. (vi) James^ b. Nov. 25, 1884. (vii) 

Thomas', b. Feb. 4, 1887. (viii) Harrison^ b. 

Nov. 6, 1889. (ix) Lillian", b. June 6, 1890. 

(x) Lucy Jane', b. July 4, 1893. (xi) George 

William^, b. Dec. 27, 1895. 

Cosby. VL William Henry^Cosby, b. July IG, 1822; d., 

Santa Clara, Cal., Mar. 12, i855 ; m., Apr. 12, 1846, 

Eliza Frances Porter, of Clay Co., Mo. Issue : 

i. Eliza F*^., m. Dykes, of Kearney, Mo, 

VII. Sarah Ann^Cosby, b. Aug. 12, 1824; d. 
Apr. 10, 1837. 

WilUam^Minter, m. EHmheth G. Waggoner, (p. 

270). Issue: 

Minter. I. Martha J^. Minter; Compiled a "Dupuy Tree" 

in 18G1, in Memphis, Tenn. ; b., 1811; d. Aug. 15, 

1871; m. William Howard Stovall; d., 1833. Issue: 

Stovail. i. James K. B'^., b. 1829 ; m. Alice Corben. Issue 

2 daughters. 

ii. George A®.; Volunteer in C. S. A.; b. Mar. 
11, 1831; m., 1858, Laura William. Issue: (i) 
Allison W'. (ii) Martha^ m. Everett Hall. 
Issue, 4. 

(iii) George A'''., m. . Issue, 2. (iv) 

Laura', m. Sim Speers. 
(v) William S^. (vi) Cornelia^, 
iii. Elizabeth J^, b. Aug. 21, 1832; m. Apr. 18, 
1854, Joseph :\rintor^Gregory (p. 284). 
iv. William Howard^; Lawyer; Volunteer in C. 
S. A; Cotton planter after the War; b. Mar. 22, 
1833 ; m. 1st., Louise J. Fowler. Issue : 
(i) John W^, m., 1898, Jeane Stone Wight, of 
Baltimore, Md. Issue: 
1. Louise Fowler^, b., 1899. 



278 GENEALOGY WITH BKIEP SKETCHES. 



Stovall. 
Minter. 



Parker. 



William^Minter, m. Elizabeth G. Waggoner, (p. 

270). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. W. H^ m. 2d. Louisa^Goodwin (p. 282) ; m. 3d. 
Koberta L^ Franks (p. 280) Issue: 
(ii) William Howard^ b., 1895. 
II. Lamira A^. Minter, b. Jan. 11, 1812; d. May 
13, 1890; m., Apr. 22, 1830, Eobert A. Parker, of 
Columbia, Ky.; d. Jan. 29, 1864. They moved 
to Somerville, Tenn., Apr., 1830, and thence to 
Memphis, Tenn., in 1841. Issue: 

i. Thomas J^., b. May 1, 1832 ; d. Nov. 29, 1852. 
Never married. 

ii. Susan Elizabeth^, b. Sept. 19, 1833; m. Apr. 
10, 1856, John Dunn Beattie, b. Apr. 7, 1827; 
d. Nov. 17, 1900. Issue: 
(i) Kosa^ b. Feb. 20, 1857; m., Apr. 21, 1880, 
J. A. Carothers, b. July 7, 1848. Issue: 
1. Laura Minter^ b. May 13, 1881. 2. Rosa®, 
b. Oct. 27, 1883. 

3. Robert^ b. Oct. 1, 1886. 4. Chas®., b. Sept. 
4, 1888. 5. Beattie^ b. Aug. 17, 1894. 
(ii) Thomas BealF, b. Oct. 10, 1858; m., Oct. 
26, 1882, Laura L. Ervin, b. July 26, 1862. 
Issue: 1. Annie Parker^, b. Sept. 14, 1884. 
2. James Ervin®, b. Mar. 15, 1887. 3. Jno. 
Dean®, b. Mar. 9, 1889; d. Feb. 21, 1890. 4. 
Lulie Beall®, b. Aug. 3, 1891. 
5. Thos. BealP, b. Nov. 17, 1898; d. Feb. 27, 
1901. 6. Robt. Bruce®, b. Aug. 5, 1900. 
(iii) Robert Marye^; Lawyer; b. Mar. 23, 
1861; m., Feb. 11, 1891, Lottie C. Lotspeich, 
b. Nov. 18, 1866 ; d. Jan. 24, 1899. Issue : 
1. Lillian Marye®, b. Dec. 29, 1891 ; d. Jan. 7, 
1893. 2. Robert Marye®, b. Mar. 3, 1895. 3. 
Minnie Dunn®, b. Dec. 16, 1896. 
(iv) Garnett Minter^ b. May 31, 1864. (v) 
Jno. Dunn^ b. Feb. 28, 1867; d. Jan. 29, 1877. 
(vi) Arthur Nelson^ b. Apr. 27, 1872. (vii) 
Fannie Marye^ b. Aug. 29, 1874. 
(viii) Henry Atwood^ b. May 17, 1877. 



Beattie. 

Caroth- 
ers. 



Beattie. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 279 



WilUam^Minterj m. Elizabeth G. Waggoner, (p. 
270). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. iii. Martha Ann^ b. July 30, 1835; d. Feb. 2, 



Parker. 



Kline. 
Parker. 

Houston. 

Parker. 

Farus- 
worth. 



Henry. 
Parker. 



m., May 25, 



1853. Never married. 

iv. Eobert A^, b. Nov. 19, 1836; 

1858, Sallie J. Flowers, b. Aug. 27, 1840. Issue : 

(i) Robert A^., b. June 20, 1868; m., Oct. 25, 

1899, Georgia Langstaff Lee, b. Sept. 1873. 

(ii) Mary Flower^ b. Feb. 26, 1874; m., Oct. 

5, 1897, Landon H. Conly, b. Dec. 9, 1867. (iii) 

William Garnett^ b. Mar. 31, 1877. 

V. Mary Houston^, b. June 4, 1838; d. Sept. 26, 

1865. Never married. 

vi. William Garnett^, b. May 1, 1841 ; d. Mar. 8, 

1878. Never married. 

vii. Minter«, b. Oct. 24, 1842; d. Oct. 

m., Nov. 20, 1867, Fannie Pillow; d. x,^c... ^., 

1890. Issue: (i) Minter^ b. Oct. 2, 1868. 

(ii) Jerome Pillow^ b. Dec. 26, 1870. 

(iii) Mary BetheF, b. Oct. 17, 1873; m., Sept. 

25, 1894, Walter Kline, b. Jan. 8, 1869 ; d. May 

10, 1900. Issue: 1. Frances Pillow^ b. Feb. 

4, 1896. 

(iv) Cynthia Jean''^, b. Oct. 28, 

Jan. 4, 1899, Joseph C. Houston, 

1870. Issue: 1. Cynthia BetheP, 

1899. 

(v) Fannie Pillow^ b. Dec. 21, 1879; m., Dec. 

22, 1897, Falmer Farusworth. Issue: 
1. Minter Parker^, b. Nov. 20, 1898. 



7, 1894; 
Mar. 17, 



1877; m., 
b. Nov. 6, 
b. Dec. 28, 



Parker. (vi) Louisa^, b. July 1, 1884. 



viii. Louisa Ray®, b. Apr. 6, 1844; m., May 10, 
1865, George J. Henry. Issue : 

(i) George J^., b. Jan. 6, 1872; m., Nov. 25, 

1896, Clarissa Fisher. 
ix. Infant®, b. and d. Apr. 5, 1846. 
X. Arthur C®., b. Feb. 3, 1850 ; m., Jan. 14, 1880, 
Edmonia Berrv. Issue: (i) Frank Sim^, b. 
May 6, 1881 ; d."^ Oct. 23, 1882. (ii) Arthur G\, 



280 GENEALOGY WITH BKIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. II I. 
Parker. 



Clapp. 

Minter. 
Lewis. 



Franks. 

Lewis. 
Holman. 



William^ Minter, m. Elizabeth G. Waggoner, (p. 

270). Issue — Continued: 

b. July 16, 1885. (iii) Lauiira Minter^ b. Feb. 

18, 1887. (iv) Julia'. 

xi. Walter Lowrie'^, b. Jan. 5, 1852; m., June 13, 

1872, Ella Burr. Issue: 
(i) Walter Lowrie^ b. Mar. 6, 1873. 
(ii) Louise Kay', b. Sept. 16, 1875; m. Wil- 
liam H. Allen, of St. Joseph, Mo. (iii) Ada% b. 
June 8, 1877; m. C. J. Miller, M. D., of Cowan, 
Tenn. (iv) Heber Jones', b. Jan. 19, 1881. (v) 
John Burr^ b. Jan. 26, 1884. (vi) Farrar 
Burr", b. Nov. 19, 1886. 

xii. Lamira*', b. June 23, 1853; m., Nov. 24, 

1874, W. L. Clapp, b. Apr. 15, 1850; (Former 

Mayor of the city of Memphis, Tenn.). Issue: 
(i) Jere Watkins^ b. Apr. 23, 1876; d. Oct. 2, 
1892. (ii) Walter Lucas^ b. Oct. 13, 1878. 
(iii) Robert Parker^, b. June 8, 1880. (iv) 
Aubrey Beard", b. Aug. 12, 1885. 
III. Sarah A^ Minter, b., 1815; d., 1878; m., 
1835, R. H. Lewis, M. D., b., 1811; d., 1871. Issue: 

i. Charles D^, b., 1836; d., 1867; m. Leonora A. 

Hill, b., 1830. 

ii. Joseph Minter^, b., 1837; d., 1858. iii. Emily 
Davis«, b., 1839; d., 1848. 

iv. Robert H^, b., 1841; ) Volun- 

V. William Minter*', b. 1843; d. 1885; Heers in 

vi. B. P6., b., 1844; d., 1899; J C. S. A. 

vii. Lamira Jane^, b., 1846; d., 1870; m., 1867, 
R. H. Franks, b., 1841; d., 1883. Issue: 

(i) Mary Minter^ b., 1868; d., 1870. (ii) 

Roberta L^, b., 1870 ; m. 1891, Wm. H". Stov- 

all (p. 278). 
viii. Mary Louisa^, b., 1848; m,. 1868, Nathan 
Holman, b., 1842. Issue: 

(i) John H^., b. and d., 1869. 

(ii) William Shields^ b., 1870; m., 1897, Lou- 

isa Kaulback, b., 1871. Issue: 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 



281 



William^ Mint er, m. Elizabeth G. Waggoner, (p. 
270). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. 1. John L\, h., 1897. 2. William Shields^, b., 

Holman. 1899. 

(iii) Anna Mary% b., 1874. (iv) Nathan^ b., 

1875. (v) Virginia^ b., 1878; m., 1896, Thomas 

G. Moore, b., 1876. (vi) Louisa ]\Iinter"., b., 

1881. (vii) Emma Hair, b., 1885. (viii) John 

T'., b., 1886. 

Lewis. ix. Pattison*^, b., 1850; d., 1880. x. Rosa Eagle^, 

b., 1852; m., 1877, G. D. Perkins; d. 1884. Issue: 

Perkins (i) Henry W^., b., 1877. (ii) Robert D^, b., 

1879; d., 1899. (iii) George^; d., 1882. 
Lewis. xi. Roberta H*^., b., 1854; m., 1873, John N. 
HaU, b., 1849. Issue: (i) Robert Lewis^ b., 1874. 
HaiL (ii) J'., b., 1876. (iii) John Nesbitt', b., 1880. 

(iv) Nathan^ b., 1883. (v) Minter^, b., 1890. 
Minter. IV. William Garrett^Minter; d. aged about 22 
yrs. Never married. 

V. Mary^ Minter, b. Feb. 23, 1821; d. June 30, 
1891 ; m., Aug. 31, 1841, Winfield Scott Rainey, b. 
June 7, 1818; d. Jan. 9, 1894; (Lawyer). Issue: 
Rainey. 1. William Garnett^, b. June 29, 1842; m., Dec. 
19, 1871, Alice Hall. Issue : 
(i) Ada^b. May 28, 1874. 
ii. Joseph Minter^, b. Dec. 2, 1843; m., Nov. 9, 
1871, Carrie Divine. Issue: 

(i) Carrie Divine"^, b. June 7, 1874. 
iii. Isaac Nelson^, b. Apr. 6, 1845; m., Mar. 15, 
1884, Mrs. Maria McKinnev. Issue : 

(i) Garnett EtheF, b. Mar. 15, 1885. 
iv. George^, Twin, b. Jan. 27, 1847; m., Apr. 28, 
1875, Lucy Yancey. 

V. Jesse% Twin, b. Jan. 27, 1847; d. Jan. 18, 
1885; m., Sept., 1875, Annie jMoore. Issue: 
(i) Ewing Irving^ b. Dec. 2, 1876. (ii) Wal- 
ter iVIoore', b. Oct. 4, 1878. (iii) Robert i\[in- 
ter^ b. July, 1881. (iv) Jesse G^., b. Mar., 1883. 



282 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. Il l, 
Rainey. 



Gant. 

Rainey. 
Minter. 

Goodwin. 



Minter. 

Eagle. 
Minter. 



William^Minter, m. Elizabeth G. Waggoner, (p, 
270). Issue — Continued: 

vi. Winfield Scott% b. Oct. 11, 1848; d. July 24, 
1866. 

vii. Horace^ b. Apr. 9, 1850; m., Feb. 6, 1889, 
Maggie Fleming. Issue: 
(i) Mary Minter^ b. Dec. 31, 1890. (ii) Addie 
Oatman^ b. Nov. 13, 1892. (iii) Horace^ b. 
Jan. 17, 1895. (iv) William Fleming^ b. June 
5, 1900. (v) Margaret Wells, b. Aug. 9, 1902. 
viii. Walter% b. Mar. 17, 1853; d. Dec. 28, 1872. 
ix. Mary Lou^, b. July 19, 1859; m., Feb. 8, 
1888, H. A. Gant, M. D., (For many years the 
leading physician of Water Valley, Miss. ; Mem- 
ber of the Mississippi State Board of Health; 
Active in Yellow Fever epidemics, and very suc- 
cessful in treating the disease; Visited Havana, 
Cuba, in the interest of stamping it out; 
Moved from Water Valley to Jackson, Miss.). 
Issue : 
(i) Albert Minter^ b. July 7, 1894. (ii) Rich- 
ard Preston^, b. Mar. 19, 1897. 
X. Sallied b. July 16, 1861; d. July 21, 1866. 

VI. Louisa H^. Minter, m. George B. Goodwin. 
Issue : 

i. William W^., Lawyer; m. Mary F®. Blythe 
(p. 276). Issue: 

(i) Robert B^, b. Feb. 26, 1874. (ii) Mary 

Anne'^, b. June 14, 1875. 

(iii) Margaret Blythe^ b. Aug. 4, 1879. 

ii. John E®., m. Buford. Issue 9. 

iii. Annie®, d. in early life. iv. George B*. 
V. Louisa®, m. William H«. Stovall (p. 278). vi. 
Arthur®, vii. Albert F®. 
viii. Mary®, ix. Martha®, x. Lamira®. 

VII. Rosa^Minter, b. June 2, 1825; m. 1st. Wil- 
liam Eagle; m. 2d. J. W. Fowler. Issue by 1st. m. 

i. William Henry®, b., 1844 ; d., 1848. 

VIII. Eliza J^. Minter, d. unmarried in early 
womanhood. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 283 

Martha^M inter, m. Peter Gregory, (p. 270). Issue: 

Chap. III. I- Paulina J^ Gregory, b. Feb. 1, 1812; d. Apr. 
Gregory ^^' 1^9 6. Never married. 

II. Thomas Edmondson^Gregory, b. Mar. 22, 
1814; m. 1st., Angeline^Pittman (p. 271). Issue: 

i. Mary^ ; d. ; m. 2d, June 14, 1849, Susan 

Dupuy^Major (p. 329). Issue: 
ii. Olive P^, b. May 14, 1851; d. Nov. 9, 1856. 
iii. Allen M^., b. Mar. 31, 1853; d. Nov. 15, 1856. 
iv. Lucy A^, b. Sept. 12, 1854 ; d. Nov. 24, 1856. 
V. Martha L^, b. Apr. 26, 1856. 
vi. Joseph E°., b. June 6, 1858; m. Oct., 1898, 
Ada Helen Major. Issue: 
(i) Nancy Elizabeth Josephine^, b. Feb. 19, 
1900. 
vii. Nancy S«., b. July 22, 1860; m. Sept., 1895, 
William E. Howland. 

viii. Mary Anna^ b. Dec. 26, 1862; m. Nov. 25, 
1891, William H. Ritchey. 
ix. Olivia M^, b. July 12, 1864; m; Feb. 12, 
1896, Lucien Scruggs Major. Issue : 
Major. (i) Marie Susanne^, b. Dec. 28, 1896. (ii) 

Gregory^ b. Dec. 29, 1897. 
Gregory. HI- Mary A^. Gregory, m. William O. Clarkson. 

Issue : 
Clarkson. i- William C®. ii. Minter®, Killed in the Civil 
War. 

iii. George G^., m. . Issue: (i) Edwin'', 

( ii ) Walter'^, (iii) Ferdinand'^, (iv) Jennie'' 

m. McGee. 

iv. Martha^, m. Thomas Wood. Issue : 
Wood. (i) George^, (ii) Addie Lou^, m. H. T. McAr- 

thur. Issue: 1. Daughter^. 2. Bruce^. 
Gregory. IV. Lucy A.^Gregory, b. Mar. 22, 1818; d. Nov 
11, 1853. Never married. 

V. Anthony Minter^ Gregory, b. Mar. 7, 1820; d 
Jan. 15, 1840. 

VI. Edwin^Gregory, b. Sept. 24, 1822; d. Mar. 12 
1859 ; m. Anne S. Lane. Issue : 



284 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Chap. III. 
Gregory. 



Marthaminter, m. Peter Gregory, (p. 270). Issue- 
Continued: 

i. Charles Ed win'', ii. Carrie^, m. Charles E. 
Piper, iii. Lou*', m. Rev. Finley. 
VII. Joseph Minter^ Gregory; Member of Ken- 
tucky Legislature, 1853-54; Lawyer; b. Sept. 28, 
1827; m., Apr. 18, 1854, Elizabeth J.«Stovall (p. 
277.) Issue: 

i. Walter L«., b. Apr. 17, 1855 ; m. Emma Bowie, 
ii. Joseph Minter^ b. Oct. 18, 1858; m. Mattie 
Harris. Issue two. 

iii. Bettie StovalP, b. Jan. 15, 1865; m. May 8, 
1888, William E. Eoivland. Issue: 
Rowland. (i) William Vernon^, (ii) John Carver^; d. 

Feb. 15, 1892. 
Gregory. iv. Mary Belief b. Feb. 2, 1867; m. Nov. 15, 
1888, John M. Hays. Issue: 
Hays. (i) Joseph Gregory^ b. Nov. 29, 1892. (ii) Ida 

Myrtle", b. Nov. 16, 1894. 
(iii) John M^., b. Dec. 12, 1898. 
Gregory. V. Ida Myrtle^ b. Sept. 4, 1868; m. Nov. 10, 

1891, James A. Sample. Issue : 
Sample. (i) Florence Howard^, b. July 26, 1897. 



William^ Trahue, m. Elizabeth Raskins, (p. 263). 

Issue : 

Trabue. I. Nancy^Trabue, b. Nov. 24, 1783; d. Feb. 16, 
1846; m. William Caldivell (his 2d. m.), b. Aug. 10, 
1777 ; d. Jan. 10, 1854. Issue : 
Caldwell. i. Elizabeth Haskins^ b. Nov. 26, 1811; d. Oct. 
25, 1865; m. William^Trabue, (p. 320). 
ii. Ann Jane^, b. Mar. 9, 1813; m. John Dudley 
Winston, M. D., of Nashville, Tenn. Issue: 
Winston. (i) Anna Maria^, m. Rev. S. Pitts, (ii) William 

Caldwell*', m. Tinsley Winston, (iii) John Dud- 
le/. Killed in C. S. A. at the battle of Chicka- 
raauga. (iv) Judith Dudley", m. Capt. M. B. 
Pilcher. (v) Mary Overton, m. Edward Camp- 
bell, (vi) George Alfred", m. Mary Hite. (vii) 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 285 

William^ Trahue, in. ElizahefJi Haskins, (p. 263). 
Issue — Continued : 



Ch^li. f^iij^^ Wagley% m. Stanley, a judge, (viii) 

Winston. Augusta"' ; d. in early womanhood, (ix) Jen- 



Caldwell. 



Helm. 
Caldwell. 



Norton. 



Caldwell. 



nie"*, m. 



Gordon, (x) Louise*^, m. 



— An- 
derson, 
iii. George Alfred^, b. Oct. 8, 1814; d. Sept., 
1866; Member of Kentucky Legislature from 
Adair county; Major of Volunteers in the Mexi- 
can War; Promoted Colonel for valuable ser- 
vices rendered in the city of Mexico ; Head of a 
prominent Law Firm in Louisville, Ky., till his 
death ; Member of Congress from the Fourth 
District of Ky. Never married, 
iv. Phoebe Lucretia^ b. July 30, 1817; d., 1893; 
m. William Duvall Helm, M. D. Issue t 
(i) Augusta^, m. William Porter, (ii) George 
Alfred''', m. Eddie Johnson. 
V. William Beverly^; M. D. of Transylvania 
University, Lexington, Ky. ; Practised Medicine 
in Adair Co., Ky. ; Moved to Louisville, Ky., 
1846, where he built up a large and lucrative 
practice; Director of the L. and N. R. R., and of 
the J. M. and I. R. R. ; Occupied many positions 
of prominence and was a devout member of the 
Baptist Church, being one of the pillars and 
strongest supporters of the Walnut St. church, 
Louisville, Ky. ; b., Columbia, Ky., Apr. 3, 1819; 
d., Louisville, Ky., May, 1892;' m., 1847, Ann 
Augusta Guthrie; (Daughter of James Guthrie, 
Secretary of the Treasury under Franklin 
Pierce). Issue: 
(i) Ann Eliza^; d., 1900; m. Ernest J. Nortoti. 
Issue : 

1. CaldwelF, m., Apr., 1893, Nannie Stephens. 
Issue: (1) James^. (2) Caldwell^. 

2. Ernesf^, m. . 

(ii) William Beverly^, m. Minnie Norton, (iii) 
James Guthrie^, m. Nannie Standi ford. 



286 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



William^Trabue, m. Elizabeth Haskins, (p. 263). 
Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. (iv) Augusta^, m. Horatio Bright, (v) Junius^, 
Cail^u. m. Ella Payne. 

(vi) Mary Phoebe^, m. Rev. Rufus P. John- 
ston, D. D. 
vi. Junius^ ; Member of the Law Firm with his 
elder brother; b. Mar. 2, 1820; d. Nov., 1891; m. 
Henrietta Rochester. No issue, 
vii. Isaac^; Member of the Law Firm with his 
two elder brothers; b. Jan. 30, 1824; m. Kate 
Smith. Issue: (i) Isaac Palmer^, m. Jane Ja- 
cobs, (ii) Mary^, m. Philip P. Peace, (iii) Mar- 
garet'', (iv) William*', (v) Catherine^, (vi) 
Alice L^. 

viii. Mary Leatitia^ b. Oct. 3, 1825; d. Oct., 
1902 ; m. Charles C. Rochester. Issue : 
(i) Anne CaldwelP, m. John O. McAlister. (ii) 
William Isaac*', d. aged 22 yrs. (iii) George Al- 
fred^, m. Julia Smith, (iv) Junius*', m. Carleen 
Rice, (v) Richmond^, m. Minnie Bond, (vi) 
Percy Winston^, m. Ainice L. Crampton. (vii) 
Leatitia Lee*', m. James R. Gudzell. 
Trabue. II. Phoebe^Trabue, b. Feb. 21, 1785; d. Mar. 12, 
1851 ; m. Isaac Hodgen, b. Aug. 8, 1779 ; d. Mar. 22, 
Hodgen. 1826. Issue: i. Robert^, b. Mar. 1, 1807; d. Apr., 
1827. 

ii. Elizabeth Haskins^ b. Dec. 21, 1808; d. Mar. 
7, 1877; m. 1st., Robert Caldwell; m. 2d., John 
Scott. Issue by 1st. m : 
Caldwell. (i) Luther^, m. Bettie Davis. Issue: 1. SamueF, 

m. Nettie Smith. 2. Tiba^, d. . 3. Hattie^ 

m. C. F. Shaw. 4. Jennie'^, m. Luther Wells. 5. 
Luther'. 6. George"'. 

(ii) Isaac^, m. Bryant. Issue: 1. Luther''. 

2. George'. 3. Sallie'. 
(iii) Priscilla^. 

June 28, 1810; d. May 1, 



Roch- 
ester. 



Hodgen. 



iii. William T^, b 



1885; m. 1st 
son 



Ann Williams : m. 2d., Jane John- 



m. 3d., Mattie English. 



Issue ; 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 287 



C hap. II I. 
Hodgen. 

Mustain. 
Hodgen. 



Cole. 
Hodgen. 



Hays. 
Hyler. 

White. 
Hodgen. 

Beamer. 



— — . (vi) Tsaac^, m. Mattie 
1 Simmie Bedford'^ 



Hodgen. 



William^Trahiie, m. Elizabeth Haskins, (p. 263). 
Issue — Continued : 

(i) Phoebe®, m. 1st., William Burton. Issue: 
1. William^. 2. Joseph^ ; m. 2d. Samuel McFer- 
ren. Issue: 3. Lula^. 4. Mary^. 5. Rosa^. 6. 
Nellie^. 

(ii) Mary^ m. T. H. Mustain. Issue: 1. Wil- 
liam^. 2. McClellan^. 3. Anne^. 4. Charles^. 5. 
Lula^. 6. Lutie^. 

(iii) Anna*^, d. — . (iv) Bettie®, m. Jesse Mus- 
tain. Issue : 1. Bulah^, m. Wm. Baird. 2. Hod- 
gen". 

(v) Alford®, m. 
Thomson. Issue; 

iv. Sallie L^, b. Feb. 6, 1812; d. June 4, 1885; 

m. George Cole. Issue : 
(i) Isora Hodgen®, m. Van D. Watson. Issue: 
1. Hodgen'^. 2. La Rue^. 

V. Isaac N^, b. Mar. 2, 1814; d. Nov. 29, 1895; 

m., Sept., 1843, Caroline E. Ritter, b. June 20, 

1826; d. Oct. 11, 1895. Issue: (i) James®, b., 
1845; d., 1847. (ii) Wilson®, b. Dec, 1847; d. 
Dec. 20, 1867. 

(iii) Lucy E®., b. Feb. 20, 1849; m. 1st., May, 
1867, Robert Hays, b., 1847 ; d., 1873. Issue : 

1. Carrie^ b. June 20, 1869 ; m. Chas. Hyler. 
Issue: (1) Ernest Beamer^. m. 2d., Sept., 
1875, John S. White, b., 1840. Issue : 

2. Lawrence Lamar"^. 3. John Stanley'^, b., 
1878. 4. Florence^ b., 1882. 

(iv) Olivia®, b. May 4, 185L 

(v) Mary Elizabeth®, b. Feb. 21, 1853; m. 

Dec, 1871, Richard H. Beamer, b. 1851. Issue: 
1. Daisy^ b. May 6, 1874; m., 1894. S. B. 
Hohson. Issue: (1) Marie Berneice^, b. June, 
1897. 2. Blanche H^, b. Apr., 1877. 3. Richard 
FreiV., b. 1879. 4. Olivia La Rue^ b. Apr., 
1883; d., 1885. 5. Joseph Hodgen^ b., 1887. 

(vi) Dora Pink®, b. Sept., 1855; m., 1873, 

Richard Forrister, b., 1853. Issue : 



288 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. II I. 
Forrister. 

Lange-- 
nour. 

Forrister. 



William^ Trahue, m. Elizabeth HasMns, (p. 263). 
Issue — Continued : 

1. Fannie^, b., 1874 ; m., 1894, Charles Lang- 
enour, b., 1873. Issue: 

(1) Thomas Eugene^ b., 1875. (2) Son^, b. 
Jan. 1900. 

2. Ethel H^., b., 1877; m., 1894, Ralston 



Hodgen. 



Wooten. 

Stith. 
Wooten. 

Hodgen. 
Wilson. 



•? 



Campbell, b., 
3. Frank H^ 



1875. 
, b., 1879. 



4. Edith 



^b., 



1895. 



(vii) Trabue% b. Apr. 3, 1860; d. . 

(viii) Joseph Dupuy^; D. D. S., University of 
California, 1887; Superintendent of the In- 
firmary, 1891-94 ; Laboratory Assistant in Met- 
allurgy, 1892-93; Assistant to Chair of Chem- 
istry and Metallurgy, 1900 ; Professor of Chem- 
istry and Metallurgy 1900; Secretary of State 
Board of Dental Examiners, 1891-96; Secre- 
tary of National Association of Dental Ex- 
aminers, 1893; b., Lexington, Ky., Sept. 12, 
1865; moved to California, Sept. 1, 1875; m. 
Oct. 29, 1889, Abigail Reynolds, b., 1871. Issue : 

1. Margaret Trabue^ b., 1890. 

vi. Nancy% b. Mar. 24, 1816; d. Dec. 1, 1839. 

vii. Walter R^, b. Aug. 14, 1818; d. Aug. 30, 

1825. 

viii. Harriet N^, b. May 11, 1821; d. Nov. 24, 

1902 ; m. T. B. Wooten. Issue : 

(i) Junius*^, m. Edmonia Shobe. 
B^. 2. Mary^. 3. elunius^. 

(ii) Mary*^, m. J. C. Stith. Issue 

2. PauF, d. . 3. Mary C^, d. . 

4. Erle^. 5. Hattie^. 6. Leslie^. 

(iii) Hodgen*^, m. Fannie Lucas. Issue: 1. 
Victor^. 2. Margaref^. 

(iv) Thomas^ (v) Hattie«. 
ix. Mary E^, b. June 9, 1825; d. Sept. 30, 1894; 
m., 1848, Riley H. Wilson, b. Apr. 5, 1824; d. 
Mar. 22, 1896. Issue: 

(i) Eugene Dupuy®, m. 1st., H. B. Stewart; m. 

2d., Angie Martin. Issue: 



Issue: 1. S. 



1. Wooten'^. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 289 

WilUam^Trahue, m. Elisaheth Hashins, (p. 263). 
Issu e — Contin u ed : 

C hap. II I. 1. Harry Dupuy"^, d. . 2. Eugene'^. 3. 

Wilson. Floy'^. 4. Martin Hodgen'^. 

5. Mary E^. 6. Kiley H^. 
(ii) Orlando Victor", m. Ella Slaughter. 
Issue : 1. Juliet^, m. J. G. Marty. 2 Victor^ 
(iii) Hodgen Isaac^, m. Lily Myer. Issue: 1. 

Myer^ 2. Elizabeth^ 3. Leslie', 
(iv) Ada Lena", (v) William Edgar", m.. 1st., 
Carrie Mackey ; m. 2d. Dora J. Hall. Issue : 1. 
Marv Lena^. 2. Carrie M^. 

(vi) Mary E". (vii) Julia", d. . (viii) 

Hallie", d. . (ix) Arthur B". 

Mary^Truhue, m. Lewis Suhlett, (p. 263). Issue 

Subiett. L William^Sublett; Soldier in the War of 1812 
b., Chesterfield Co., Va., Mar. 3, 1780; d., Bellville 
la., 1840; m., 1806, Mrs. Nancy (Samuel) Saun 

ders ; d., 1845 Pagfe, 291 

II. James^ Subiett; Soldier in the War of 1812 
b. July 15, 1785; d., Clinton, Ky., June 9, 18G0; m. 
Sept. 3, 1807, Susan Edzard, b. May 17, 1789 ; d 
June 9, 1860. Issue: 

i. Lewis H^., b. June 5, 1808 ; d. June 7, 1826. 
ii. Martha A^, b. Mav 10, 1810; d. Nov. 20, 1885; 
m. 1st., Oct. 28, 1828, William Waller. Issue: 
Waller. (i) gusau Frances", m. John T. Moore, of 

Clinton, Ky. Issue: 
Moore. 1. John T^, m. 1st. Florence Wells. Issue: 

(1) John T8. (2) EobertW^ (3) Howard^. 
(4) Lillian Frances^: m. 2d. Lillian Mur- 
rah. 

Waller. (ii) Robert". Martha A^ m. 2d., . Thomla- 

son, M. D. Issue, (iii) Ada", m. Rudd. 

Subiett. iii. William Edward^ b. July 4, 1812; d., 1890; 
ra., June 13, 1873, Mary Cook. 
iv. Mary Frances^ b. Dec. 15, 1814; d., 1886; 
m., Sept. 11, 1832, Dodge, v. Margaret', b. 



290 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Mary^Trabue, m. Lewis Suhlett, (p. 263). Issue — ■ 

Cofitinued: 

Chap. III. Apr. 24, 1817; d. Mar. 13, 1841; m., July 27, 

sllbiltt. ^^^^' Ramsey, vi. Eliza% b. Sept. 3, 1819; 

m., Oct., 1841, David Holmes. Moved to Missou- 
ri, vii. Aepia Woolfork^ b. Oct. 29, 1822 ; d. Oct. 
15, 1845. viii. James Taylor^ b. June 20, 1825 ; 
m. Nov., 1859, Irene Dodge, ix. George^, b. May 
14, 1828; d. Aug. 11, 1848. x. John CaldwelP, b. 
Nov. 30, 1830; d. Feb. 28, 1869; m., Nov. 15, 
1855, Martha Ringo. 

III. Lewis^Sublett; Soldier in Capt. Z. Single- 
ton's Company, Col. James Allin's regiment, war of 
1812; b., 1787; d., Woodford Co., Ky., 1827; m., 
1808, Susan Coleman, b., 1793; d., Woodford Co., 
Ky., Aug., 1834; [Daughter of Thomas Coleman; 
d., Woodford Co., Ky., Aug. 28, 1828; m., 1781, Mrs. 
Sarah (Strother, b.. Orange Co., Va., 1753; d., 
Woodford Co., Ky., 1830) Hawkins; Daughter of 
William, b., Culpeper Co., Va., Apr. 30, 1726; d., 
Woodford Co., Ky., Nov. 7, 1808, and Mrs. William 
(Pannill) Strother; Son of Francis Strother, of St. 
Mark's Parish, Va., b., 1700; d., 1752, who married 
Susanna Dabney, daughter of John Dabney, who 
married Sarah Jennings ; Thomas Coleman was the 
son of James Coleman, m. Mildred Chew, daughter 
of Thomas Chew, m. Martha Taylor, b. Jan. 27, 
1702, daughter of James Taylor the 2d, b. Mar. 14, 
1674 ; d. June 23, 1729 ; m., Feb. 3, 1699, Martha 
Thompson, b. 1679, d. Nov. 19, 1762, daughter of 
Col. William Thompson, an officer of the English 
army. James Taylor, 2d., settled in Orange Co., 
Va., about 1722, where he located 10,000 acres of 
land on which he lived and died, and was justice of 
the peace 1702-14 for King and Queen County.] 
Page, 292 

IV. John^Sublett, b., Woodford Co., Ky. ; Killed, 
1813, in the engagement of Dudley's defeat, war of 
1812 ; m. . Issue. 



LINE OP JOHN JAMESiDUPUY. 291 

Mary^Trahue, m. Leivis Sublett, (p. 263). Issue — 

Continued: 

Chap. III. i. Marian^, m. 1st. Cave JoZwson. Issue five; m. 
Subiett. 2d. Fauntleroy Johnson, of Va. Issue six. 
V. Frances^ Subiett, m. William Vaughan. 

William* Suhlett, m. Mrs. 'Nancy launders, (p. 289). 

Issue: 

I. John T^. Subiett, b. Nov. 8, 1806; d., 1854; m. 
1st., Susan Oates. Issue : 

i. Nancy F*^., m. Cormock. Issue: (i) 

Frances'^, (ii) Gideon'^, (iii) Mary"^. 

ii. Mary C^, b., June 7, 1830; d. May, 1876; m. 

John Dills, b., Belleville la.. May 15, 1829. 

Issue : 

Dills. (i) John H'^., b. May 15, 1849. (ii) Leana'^, b. 

July 22, 1852. (iii) Mary E^., b. May 13, 1854; 

m. Tarrant, (iv) P. Edward", b. Apr. 12, 

1858. (v) William Cole^ b. July 26, 1861. (vi) 
Samuel B^, b. Oct. 30, 1864. (vii) Agnes^, b. 

Jan. 7, 1868 ; m. Tarrant. 

John T^., m. 2d. Mary J. Smith. Issue: 
Subiett. iii- Oeorge'''. iv. Zackary®. v. John V^. 

II. Phoebe Ann^ Subiett, b. Aug. 9, 1808; m. 1st. 
John D. Bell ; m. 2d., Brooks. 

III. Mary^Sublett, b., Westport, Ky., 1812; d., 
Los Angeles, Cal., 1893; m., 1827, John Falls 
O'Neill, (Son of Terranve O'Neill, an officer of the 
Koyal Navy of Ireland!) ; Mr. O'Neill and his \\ife 
moved to Mineral Point, Wisconsin Territory, 
where he took an active part in having the Terri- 
tory admitted to Statehood; Appointed one of a 
committee of three Commissioners by President, 
Benjamin Harrison to locate the site of the Capitol 
of the State; Later, lie and his wife removed to St. 
Louis, Mo., and in 1849 they went to the American 
Valley, Cal. Issue: 

O'Neill. i. Sarah Ann«, b. Oct. 7, 1828. ii. Mary Fran- 
ces% b. July 4, 1830; m. Bell. iii. John 



292 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

William* Suhlett, m. Mrs. Nancy Saunders, (p. 289). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. Ill Bruce^ b. Aug. 22, 1832. iv. Theresa C«., b. Feb. 

O'Neill. 10, 1834 ; m. J. B. Wheeler, of Baltimore, Md. v. 
Adelade Clara% b. Nov. 30, 1836. vi. William 
Sublette b. Feb. 10, 1838. vli. Thomas Tyrone^ 
b. Mar. 28, 1840. viii. Richard^ b. May 10, 1842. 
ix. Clara Maria*', b. May 9, 1844. x. James Falls^, 
b. Apr. 5, 1846. xi. Louis Josephine^, b. Sept. 26, 
1848. xii. Chas. Terrance^ b. Aug. 22, 1851. xiii. 
Frank Owen^, b. May 2, 1857. 

Subiett. IV. William^Sublett; d . V. Thomas^ Sub- 

lett; d. . 

Leivis'^Suhlett, m. Susan Coleman, (p. 290.). Iss7ie: 

— Continued: 

I. MaryS Subiett, b., Woodford Co., Ky., July 12, 
1810; d., St. Joseph, Mo., Jan. 20, 1897; m., 1828, 
James Iluggins, b. in Tyrone, Ireland. Issue : 
Huggins. i- Susan'', ii. Sarah^. iii. James^. iv. Marga- 
ret^, V. Andrew'', vi. Lewis", b. Feb. 1, 1842. vii. 
William", b. Jan. 26, 1844. 
Subiett. II- Thomas^ Subiett, b. May 8, 1812; d., Ver- 
sailles, Ky., Jan. 12, 1873 ; m. Catherine Morton ; d., 
Lexington, Ky., 1900. Issue: 

i. Fannie", ii. Susan", iii. William", m. Irene 
Brown. Issue : 

(i) William^, (ii) Lewis^. (iii) Jennie'^, 
iv. Thomas", v. Morton", vi. David". 

III. John^Sublett; d. young . 

IV. Susan^ Subiett; d. young. 

V. Frances^ Subiett, b., Woodford Co., Ky., Feb. 
7, 1818; d., St. Joseph, Mo., Mar. 8, 1906; m. 1st., 
Mar. 18, 1834, Thomas Logan, b., Donegal, Ireland, 
Aug. 7, 1801; d., Shelbyville, Ky., Apr. 18, 1840; 
[Son of John and Jane (Shannon) Logan; Son of 
John, who descended from a Logan of Restalrig, 
Scotland]. Issue: 
Logan. i- John Subiett"; M. D; Acting Assistant Sur- 
geon in the U. S. A., 1862-65; appointed Assist- 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 293 

Lewis^Suhlett, m. Susan Coleman, (p. 290.). Issue 

— Continued: 

C hap. II I. ant Surgeon of the Buchanan County of Mis- 
Logan, souri Militia, by Gov. Thomas C. Fletcher, July 
18, 1865 ; Appointed Fish Commissioner of Mis- 
souri, May 13, 1882, and reappointed by Gov. 
John S. Marmaduke, Jan. 20, 1885; Appointed 
on the Board of Managers of the Bureau of 
Geology and Mines of Missouri, by Gov. Lon V. 
Stephens, Nov. 5, 189G to 1897; Appointed by 
same as one of the commissioners of the Trans- 
Mississippi and Inter-National Exposition, 1897; 
Member of the Trans-Mississippi Commercial 
Congress, 1899; Member of the Missouri chap- 
ter of the Sons of the Revolution; b., Shelby- 
ville, Ky., June 25, 1836; m., Nov. 20, 1862, 
Emma Puryear Cotton, b. Feb. 26, 1811; 
[Daughter of Charles and Sarah Blackburn 
(Puryear, his 2d. wife, b., Louisville, Kv., May 
1, 1801; d. Sept. 7, 1843; m. Oct. 26, 1837; 
daughter of Wm. Puryear, b., Eichmond, Va. ; 
m; June 26, 1803, Mildred Bohanan; daughter 
of Richard Bohanan, who married Sarah Black- 
burn, of Virginia; daughter of Col. Robert 
Blackburn, who married Miss Ritchie,) Cotton, 
b., Loudon Co., Va., Oct. 3, 1781; d., Woodford 
Co., Ky., Jan. 9, 1863; Son of William and 
Frances (Taylor) Cotton, Soldier in the Revo- 
lution, who moved from Loudon Co., Va , to 
Fayette (now Woodford) Co., Ky., in 1787, and 
both died therein in the spring of 1826]. Issue- 
(i) Charles Cotton^; M. D;'b., Louisville, Ky.j 
Feb. 25, 1864; m., St. Joseph, Mo., Feb. 6, 1900, 
Edith Pearle Campbell, b., Atchison Co., iNIo 

Dec. 10, 1882; d. . [Daughter of James 

Andrew and ]\rrs. Jennie ^Marshall, widow of 
Joseph H. .Mai'sliall, wlio died in Clay Co., Mo. 
nee Mann, daughter of Wm. (M. D), Son of 
Wm. and Rutli E. Wolsley) .Alann) Campbell, 
Son of Jno. Campbell]. Issue: 1. James-^ b.' 



294 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Lewis^Siiblett, m. Susan Coleman, (p. 290.). Issue 

— Continued: 

Chap. III. J^^- '^f 1901; C. C\ m. 2d. Mary Luy, of Los 
/-"Ti Angeles, Gal. Issue: 2. John Luy^, b. Oct. 

^ 10, 1906. 

(ii) Thomas Trabue'^, b, Buchanan Co., Mo., 
Jan. 15, 1866. 

(iii) John Sublett^, b., St. Joseph, Mo., Nov. 
1, 1869; m. Nov. 20, 1899, Caroline Ashton 
Sheridan; [Daughter of John J. and Lucinda 
Morgan (Ashton, daughter of Thomas ?Ashton, 
who married Lucinda Bassett Small, daughter 
of Thomas Small, who married Sarah McDon- 
ald, of Virginia, daughter of William McDon- 
ald, who married Charity Cobbley Flora) 
Sheridan; Son of Solomon Neill and Anne 
(Byrne) Sheridan]. Issue: 
1. Sheridan^, b. Dec. 9, 1900. 2. Thomas Ash- 
ton^, b. July 1, 1903. 3. Mary Louise^, b. Jan. 
22, 1907. 

(iv) Frank Puryear'^, b., Andrew Co., Mo., 
Dec. 7, 1872; m., Apr. 11, 1894, Margaret 
Croysdale, b. Dec. 25, 1872; (Daughter of Wm. 
Edward Croysdide and Emily Skinner, of Kan- 
sas City, Mo., daughter of Phinehas Skinner 
and Mary Patton, of Piatt Co., Mo.). Issue: 

1. John SublettS b. Apr. 20, 1896. 

2. David Croysdale^ b. Mar. 21, 1899. 3. 
Frank Puryear^, b. Nov. 25, 1902. 4. Emilv^, 
b. Feb. 18, 1805. 

(v) Louis Sublett^, b., Louisville, Ky., Aug. 

10, 1876. 

(vi) Milton Tootle^ b., St. Joseph, Mo., Feb. 

15, 1883. 

ii. Mary% b., Shelbyville, Ky., Sept. 7, 1838; d., 
St. Joseph, Mo., Feb. 22, 1866 ; m. Oct. 27, 1859, 
William Richardson Lyhens, of Martinsburg, 
Va. ; ( Graduate of West Point) . Issue : 
Lykens. (i) Mary O'NeilF, b. Aug. 5, 1860; d. Jan. 9, 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 295 



C hap. II I. 
Lykens. 



O'NeiU. 



Fairleigh, 



Enright. 
Fairleigh 



I 



Davis. 

Fairleigh. 
O'Neill. 



Tootle. 



Lewis^Suhlett, m. ISusan Coleman^ (p. 290.). Issue 

— Continued: 

1861. (ii) William Logan^, b., St. Joseph, Mo., 
Oct. 19, 1861. 
Frances^ (Sublett) Logan, m. 2d., James L. O'- 
Neill, b. Jan .12, 1817; d., St. Joseph, Mo., Feb. 18, 
1865; (Son of Kyron O'Neill, b., Kilkenny, Ire- 
land, 1781 ; m., 1814, Catherine Doyle, b., Wexford, 
Ireland). Issue: 

iii. Alice^ b., Shelbyville, Ky., June 16, 1842; 
m., St. Joseph, Mo., Oct. 2, 1867, William G. 
Fairleigh, b., Hardin Co., Ky., Feb. 9, 1830; 
(Son of Andrew Fairleigh and Jane Tolbert). 
Issue : 
(i) James L. O'NeilF, b. St. Joseph, Mo., Aug. 
12, 1868 ; m., Apr. 17, 1895, Forestine Caviller 
McDonald, b. Sept. 30, 1872; (Daughter of 
Wm. A. P. McDonald and Forestine R. Gower; 
daughter of Alexander G. Gower and Fores- 
tine Caviller, b., New Orleans, La). Issue: 1. 

William^, b., 1902. 
(ii) Jennie^, b., St. Joseph, Mo., May 5, 1870; 
m., Jan. 25, 1893, Charles Frederick Enright; 
(Son of Michael Enright and Mary Enright, 
b. in Illinois). Issue: 
1. Wm. Fairleigh^, b. Feb. 3, 1894. 2. 

Charles Frederick^, b. June 23, 1898 ; d. . 

(iii) Mary Logan'^, b., St. Joseph, Mo., Apr. 
27, 1872; m., Jan. 25, 1893, Randolph Milton 
Davis, b. Oct. 28, 1868 ; ( Son of Randolph True 
Davis, b. Dec. 26, 1837, and Mary Bodston of 
Platte Co., Mo. ) . Issue : 
1. Randolph Milton^, b. Oct. 12, 1894. 2. 
Alice Fairleigh^ b. July 5, 1896. 
(iv) William G^., b. St. Joseph, Mo. 
iv. Catherine^, b., Shelbyville, Ky., June 6, 
1844; m., Jan., 1866, Milton Tootle, b., Ross Co., 
O., Feb. 26, 1823; d., St. Joseph, Mo., Jan. 2, 
1887; (Son of John Tootle and IVFary Arm- 
strong). Issue: (i) Catherine'^; d. in infancy. 



296 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Dameron, 



Tootle. 



Lewis'^ Suhlett, m. Susan Coleman, (p. 290.). Issue 

— Continued: 

Chap. III. (ii) Frances Siiblett", b., St. Joseph, Mo., Apr. 

:^^ 5, 1870; m., London, Eng., July 10, 1892, Ed- 

ward Caswell Dameron, b., Glasgow, Mo., Dec. 
18, 1857; [Son of Logan Douglas and Miss 
(Chappall, Randolph Co., Mo.) Dameron, b., 
(Caswell Co., N. C. ; d., St. Louis, Mo. ; Son of 
George B. Dameron and Mary Moore, both of 
Virginia]. Issue: 
1. Catherine^, b., St. Joseph, Mo., May 6, 
1893. 2. Frances^, b., St. Louis, Mo., Apr. 
12, 1895. 

(iii) Milton', b., St. Joseph, Mo., Mar. 18, 
1872; m., New York cty., Nov. 9, 1892, Lillian 
Bell Duckworth, b., Cincinnati, O., June 16, 
1872 ; ( Daughter of George Duckworth, of Cin- 
cinnati, O., and Lucy Bishop, b., Fleming Co., 
Ky). Issue: 
1. George Duckworth^, b. June 26, 1894. 2. 
Milton^ b. Dec. 10, 1895. 3. William Damer- 
on^, b. Dec. 2, 1896. All in St. Joseph, Mo. 
(iy) John James", b. INIar. 2, 1874; m. Mar. 5, 
1895, Mrs. Ella (Parker) Robinson. Issue: 
1. Catherine O'Neill^, b. June 20, 1897. 
O'Neill. V. Virginia^, b. May 28, 1846; m., St. Joseph, 

Mo., Thomas Weakly. Issue: 
Weakly. (i) Armstrong Beattie'^, b. Aug. 16, 1866; m., 

Jan. 12, 1892, Susan Steel; (Daughter of Dud- 
ley M. Steel and Minnie Withers), 
(ii) Lawrence O'NeilF, b. May 24, 1868; m., 
July, 1892, Jannette Landis, b. Sept. 11, 1867; 
(Daughter of Benjamin Landis and Kate Mor- 
rison). Issue: 
1. Lawrence O'NeilP, b. July 22, 1893. 2. 
Virginia Huggins^, b. Dec. 4, 1894. 3. William 
Beattie^, b. Apr. 16, 1895. 4. Jannette Landis^, 
b. Nov. 27, 1897. 5. Francis O'NeilP. 6. Charles 
Enright^. 
(iii) Catherine^ b. July 8, 1875. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 297 

Lewis* Biihlett, m. Susan Coleman, (p. 290.). Issue 

— Continued : 

Chap. III. vi. Susan% b., 1848; d., 1851. vii. James L«. b., 
O'Neill. 1850 ; d., 1872. 

Subiett. VJl. Lewis^Siiblett, b., Woodford Co., Ky., Oct. 
' 15, 1821 ; d., Versailes, Ky., June 9, 1878 : Identified 
with tlie business interests of Versailles, Ky., for 
more than a generation ; Left a fine estate at death, 
a part of which was bequeathed to the Widows' and 
Orphans' Home of Louisville, Ky. 

VII. William'^ Subiett, b., 1823; d., San Fran- 
cisco, Cal., 1888; m., Shelbyville, Ky., Susan 
Brown; (Daughter of Dr. Oscar Brown). Issue: 

i. Susan'^, d. in infancy. 

VIII. Joel Dupuy^ Subiett; M. D., b., Woodford 
Co., Ky., 1825; d., Pueblo, Tex., Feb. 20, 1848; 
Surgeon of the third Kentucky Regiment of Volun- 
teers, commanded by Col. Manilus V. Thompson, in 
the Mexican War; His remains were brought to 
Kentucky by Company I of said regiment, Capt. 
Thomas Todd, of Shelby Co., Ky, and were interred 
in the family burial ground of Woodford, Co., Ky., 
with military honors. 

DaniePTrahiie, m. Alary TTaslcins, (p. 26.'i). Issue: 

Trabue. I. Judith^Trabue, m. S. Scott. Issue: i. Judith 

S^., m. Brown; Issue four'^. 

II. Sallie'*Trabue, m. G. Anderson. Issue: i. 

Ander- ^rartha',m, Penix. 

son. ii. Eliza-'', m. Barrett, iii. Sallie'', m. 

Terry. Issue: 
Terry. H) Bettie^\ (ii) George", (iii) Mary". 

Trabue. III. Rev. James^Trabue, ra. Eliza Stites. Issue: 
i. Richard"', m. Kate Dougherty. 

ii. Corina"'. iii. Sarah''; d. . iv. James'. 

V. :^rary•^ m. W. H. BarJcsdalc. Issue: (i) Wil- 

lian/'. (ii) Trabue". 
vi. Willianv% m. Lizzie Shrine. Issue: (i) 
James Upton", (ii) Sallie". 



298 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

DaniePTrahue, m. Mary Haskins, (p. 264). Issue 

— Continued: 

Chap. III. IV- Mary^Trabue, m. Lewis Suhlett. Issue: i. 
SubieTt. Sallie^. ii. Mary^. iii. Judith^, iv. Mary^. 

V. Robert^, vi. Wiliam^, m . vii. DanieP, 

m. . 

Trabue. V. John^'Trabue ; murdered when 12 yrs. of age 
by the notorious Harpers. 

VI. Daniel^Trabue, m. Mary Paxton of Texas. 
Issue: i. Robert^, ii. Ann^. 

iii. Ellen^, m. Smith, iv. Presley^, v. Wil- 
liam^, m. . vi. George'^, m. . 

VII. Presley^Trabue ; d. young. 

VIIL Robert^Trabue; Colonel in C. S. A.; m. 
Lucy Waggoner ; d. in Illinois. Issue : 

i. Eliza^. ii. Sallie^, m. George Patterson, of 
Patter- Memphis, Tenn. Issue: (i) Robert^. 
son. ( ii ) Annie^, m. William B. Mitchell. Issue : 1. 

George Patterson'^. 

(iii) Oliver G«. ; Killed in C. S. A., at the bat- 
tle of Shiloh, Tenn. (iv) Thomas^, m. 

Hall, (v) George*', (vi) John^. (vii) Reuben^, 
(viii) Holmes^. 
Trabue. iii. Robert^, m. M. Witherspoon. iv. Mary'', m. 
Joseph Lester. 

V. John^, m. . vi. Martha^, m. . vii. 

Olympiad, m. Hall. 

Martha^Trahue, m. Josiah Wooldridge, (p. 264). 

Issue: 

^qqj. I. Seth^Wooldridge, m. Mary Ewing. Issue six^. 
dridge. II. Dauiel^Wooldridge, m. Lucy Thurman. 

III. Samuel^Wooldridge, m. . Issue six^. 

IV. Martha^ Wooldridge, m. Cheatham, and 

settled in Illinois. 

V. Mary* (Polly) Wooldridge, m. Joseph Barton 
White, b., 1780 ; d. May, 1873, at the residence of his 
daughter, Mrs. Egbert Wooldridge, of Memphis, 
Tenn., (Son of Thomas White, an officer in the 
revolution ) Page 299 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 299 

Martlia^Trabue, m. Josiah Wooldridge, (p. 26Jf). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. IIL VI. Claiborne^Wooldridge, d Mar. 1838 ; m. Fran- 
Wooi- ces^Trabue, (p. 320). 

dridge. VII. S'tephen^Wooldridge, m. Mary Williams. 
Issue : 

i. Margaret^, ii. Martha^, iii. Demetrius^, iv. 
Zackary^. 
VIII. Josiah^Wooldridge, m. Elizabeth Hill. IX. 
Judith^Wooldridge, m. James^Trabue (p. 269). 

X. Levi^Wooldridge, m. Henrietta Phelps. Issue, 
six^. 

XI. Livingston^Wooldridge. 

Mary'^Wooldridge, m. Joseph B. White, (p. 298). 

Issue: 

White. I. Oscar^ White, m. Rebecca McMullen. Issue: 
i. Oscar*^. 

II. Elizabeth^White, b., 1814; m. Egbert Wool- 
dridge. Issue: i Oscar^. 
VTooi- ii- Mary Hellen^, m. T. J. Latham, no issue, 
dridge. iii. Harriet Clay^, m. J. G. Simpson. Issue : ( i ) 
Lawrence''', iv. Charles'^. Killed in C. S. A., July 
22, 1864, in battle at Atlanta, Ga. v. Egbert^ m. 
Mollie Wooldridge. vi. William^, m. Mary Bax- 
ter. Issue: (i) Baxter''^. (ii) Latham^, (iii) Al- 
bert Scott^. vii. George®; d. in infancy, viii. 
James Albert®; d., 1900; m. Katherine New- 
comb. No Issue, ix. Margaret Moon®, m. Isaac 
Peters. Issue: 
Peters. (i) John Egbert^, (ii) Mary Latham'^, (iii) 

Charles'^, (iv) Lawrence"^. 
White. III. Amanda^White, b. Aug. 16, 1815 ; d. Jan. 21, 
1861; m., Oct. 14, 1835, James Allen Orcgory, b. 
Feb. 23, 1805. Issue : 
Gregory. i. Mary Lucretia®, b. Aug., 1836; d. Apr. 3. 
1893. Never married. 

ii : Hortense®, b. Feb. 4, 1838 ; m., Feb. 5, 1856, 
James Hickman Walker, b., 1827; (Deputy 
Sheriff for three years, and Sheriff for four 



300 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 

Mary^Wooldridge, m. Joseph B. White, (p. 298). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. II I. years of Crittenden Co., Ky., Census enumerator 
Gregory. in I860; Circuit Clerk for twelve years; Com- 
missioner of Court for many years). No Issue: 
iii. Edgeworth^, b., Union Co., Ky., Jan. 16, 
1840; m., Dec. 6, 1871, Jimmie Edmonia Yancy, 
b., Todd Co., Ky., Sept. 14, 1854. Issue: 
(i) Claude^ b. Dec. 27, 1872. (ii) Edgie^, b. 
Dec. 23, 1876. 

(iii) Georgie^ b. June 8, 1878 ; d. Dec. 4, 1880. 
(iv) Charles^ b. July 7, 1882. 
(v) Lucy Edmonia^ b. Sept. 29, 1884. (vi) 
Eoy Allen^, b. Apr. 28, 1887. 
iv. Lucy^ b. May 7, 1842; m., June 30, 1869, 
John Andrew Caldwell, b. Apr. 20, 1838; d., At- 
lanta, Ga., May, 1903. Issue : 
Caldwell. (i) Hinton% b. July 21, 1870. (ii) Mary^, b. 

Nov. 12, 1872. (iii) John^ b. Dec. 19, 1873. 
(iv) Lucy Amanda^, b. Nov. 8, 1875. (v) 
Hickman Walker"^, b. Jan. 24, 1877; m., Sept. 

30, 1897, . Issue: 1. John Irby^ b. Nov. 

12, 1898. (vi) Hugh^ b. Nov. 21, 1880. 
Gregory. V. James Allen^, b. May 10, 1844; d. July 31, 
1847. 

vi. Elizabeth Gentry^, b. Jan. 21, 1847 ; m. Aug. 

18, 1870, John R. Finley, b. Oct. 13, 1844. Issue : 

Finiey. ( i ) '^^^^J Blue^ b. Aug. 5, 1871 ; m. Eosa Kirk. 

Issue: 1. John Randolph^. 2. Percy Gregory^, 

3. Clifton Benjamin^ 4. Mary Elizabeth^*^ 
(ii) Hortense^ b. Dec. 4, 1873. (iii) Fannie 
Elizabeth^ b. July 11, 1877. 
(iv.) Anna Lucy^ b. Dec. 11, 1878. (v) Ar- 
thur Whiter b. Oct. 15, 1881. 
(vi) Mary Hellen^, b. Dec. 28, 1886. 
Gregory. v"- Charles Hickman^ b. June 7, 1850 ; m., July 
15, 1877, Lucy L. Hill, b. May 25, 1853. Issue: 
(i) Mary EtheF, b. July 26, 1878. (ii) John 
Hiir, b. Jan. 31, 1881. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 301 



Mary^Wooldridgc, m. Joseph B. White, (p. 298). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. II I. (iii) Edgeworth^, b., 1883; d. Nov. 5, 1889. 

Gregory. (iv) Lucj Norma^ b. Jan. 20, 1888. 

(v) William Garrison^, b. Dec. 4, 1895. 
viii. Fannie White«, b. Aug. 18, 1852; m., 1879, 
Charles Henry Linley, M. D., b. June 19, 1847. 
Issue : 
Linley. (i) Maria^ b. Sept. 16, 1880. (ii) Corinne^ 

b. Mar. 15, 1882. (iii) Roy Gregory^ b. Dec. 
16, 1883. (iv) Nona^ b. ^Oct. 22, 1885. (v) 
Alice^, b. Apr. 16, 1888. (vi) Louis Dupuv"^, b. 
Jan. 23, 1890. 

ix. Joseph Blanchard*', b. Dec. 12, 1856 ; d. Aug. 
16, 1858. 
IV. Sarah^ White, m. Joseph H. Hickman. Issue : 



Gregory. 

White. 
Hickman, 



i. Harrison^, m. Sarah Brooke, ii. 



beth*^, d. 



Fannie^, m. 



iii. Louisa^, m. 



V. Lindwood^, d. 



Mary Eliza- 
- Taylor, iv. 



Trabue. 
Clarkson. 



Edicard^Trahue, m. 1st. Martha Eashins, (p. 26 Jf). 

Issue: 

I. Mary4( Polly) Trabue, b., 1787; m. Anselm 
Clarkson. Issue : 

i. Edward Ttabue^, m. Elizabeth Price, ii. Mar- 
tha Haskins'^, m. C. Blackburn, iii. George W^. 

m. 1st. Rogers; m. 2d. Corbin. iv. 

Garnett ; ( Daughter of 
V. Nancv Pittman^, m. 

— . Is- 
Hnnie. 



Green Clay^, m. 

Gol. Wm. Garnett) 

James M. Corhin. Issue: (i) Son^, m. 

sue 2 daughters, vi. James M^., m. 



Legislature 



from Grant 



Lindsay. 
Collins. 



Trabue. 



Issue: (i) Mary^. vii. Emily^, m. Opie J. Lifid- 
sajj, M. D. ; (Transylvania University, Lexing- 
ton, Ky. ; Member of 
Co., KyK Issue: 
(i) Alice M^., m. W. L. Collins. Issue: 
1. IMarguerite*^, m., Dec. 6, 1892, Joseph Wil- 
lard Haley. 2. Julius'^, d. 
3. Davie Lindsay^, m. Thomas INL Worcester. 
II. Elizabeth^Trabue, m. Robert Hatcher. Issue: 



V 



302 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Edward^Trcibue, m. 1st. Martha EasUns, (p. 26^). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. II I. i. Henrjs, b., about 1817; d., 1870. ii. Sallie", 

Hatcher. b. about, 1819; d., 1865. iii. Edward Trabue^ b. 

about, 1821; d. 1899. iv. Robert% b. about, 1823; 

d., 1891. V. Jerry^, b. Jan. 24, 1825 ; m., Apr. 24, 

1859, Mary Elizabetli Waldrop. Issue: 

(i) Mary Lelia% b. Mar. 25, 1860; m., 1879, 

Daniel Devasher. Issue : 1. Elizabeth A^., b. 

Nov. 12, 1879. 
(ii) William Robert^ b. Nov. 24, 1861; m., 
Nov. 23, 1887, Nannie Tucker. Issue : 
1. Edwin^ b. Feb. 23, 1889. 2. Lucile^ b. 
June 10, 1891. 3. George^ b. Sept. 10, 1895. 
(iii)Jerry% b. Dee. 20, 1863. (iv) Charles 
MorehousV, b. Sept. 9, 1866. (v) Samuel Per- 
celP, b. Aug. 27, 1868. (vi) SewelF', b. Aug. 27, 
1871. (vii) James Berry^ b. Sept. 30, 1874; m., 
1899, Mattie Walthall, (viii) Edward CreeP, b. 
Nov. 4, 1878. (ix) Mattie Haskins^ b. Aug. 26, 
1880. 

vi. Nancy^ b. about 1827; d., 1864. vii. Eliza- 
beth^ b. about, 1829. 

viii. Martha Haskins% b. about, 1831 ; d. Mar. 
17, 1888; m., July, 1849, Charles G. Morehouse. 
Issue: (i) Robert Jay«, b. July 7, 1850; d., 1864. 

III. Nancy Haskins^Trabue ; Her mother died 
when she was two years old, and she was raised 
mostly by her grand-mother, Olympia (Dupuy) 
Trabiie; b. Oct. 8, 1791; m., Nov. 6, 1816, Asa Pitt- 
man, b., Chesterfield Co., Va., 1788; d. May 6, 1837; 
(Moved to Woodford Co., Ky., about 1810; Long a 
dry-goods merchant of Columbia, Ky.; Moved to 
Nashville, Tenn., about 1836, for educational ad- 
vantages of his elder children; Returned to Ken- 
tuckv and settled in Russellville ; Soldier in the war 
of 1812 ; The Pittman family immigrated from Eng- 
land to America about 1750) Page, 304 

IV. George Washington^Trabue, b., Woodford 
Co., Kv., Feb. 22, 1793, d. Sept. 5, 1873; m., Jan. 



Trabue. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 303 

Edward^Trdbue, m. 1st. Martha Haskins, (p. 264). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . 13, 1820, Mrs. Elizabeth (Buford) Chambers, b., 

Trabue. Woodford Co., Ky., Dec. 8, 1794 ; d. Aug. 30, 1869. 

Page, 30Y 

Edward^Trahue, m, 2d., Jane E. Clay, (p. 264). 

Issue: 

V. Charles Clay^Trabue; Moved to Missouri and 
lived ten years in that state, thence to Nashville, 
Tenn; b., Woodford Co., Ky., Apr. 27, 1798; m., 
July 5, 1820, Agnes Green Woods Page, 308 

VI. John E^ Trabue, M. D., m. Elizabeth Atkin- 
son. Issue : 

i. Mrs. S. A^ Latimer, ii. Mrs. B. T^ Marshall. 

VII. Martha^Trabue, b., 1803; d. July 11, 1833; 
m., Apr. 6, 1819, Aaron^Trabue (p. 319). 

VIII. Jane E^ Trabue (Twin), b., Woodford Co., 
Ky., Nov. 7, 1805; d., Winchester, Mo., Jan. 20, 
1888,at the residence of her son, Jacob Lewellen; 
m., in Missouri, 1824, John White Lewellen, of 
Welsh descent, b., in Ky., about 1805; d., Montgom- 
ery Co., Mo., 1886; (The name was originally spelled 
"Lewellyn", but John White changed his to '^Lew- 
ellen," to which spelling his posterity has adhered, 
excepting his grandson, Charles Trabue, who re- 
sumed the old spelling. ) Page, 310 

IX. Cynthia Ann^Trabue (Twin), b. Wood- 
ford Co., Ky., Nov. 7, 1805; d., New London, Mo., 
June 26, 1886; m.. May 31, 1825, Taylor Jones, of 
Ralls Co., Mo., b. in Virginia, 1805 ; d. Mar. 7, 1885 ; 
(Son of Dabney, son of Harrison Jones, wiiose 
father came from Wales) Page, 314 

X. Susan^Trabue, m. Philip Clayton; Lived near 
Alton, 111. Issue: 

Clayton. i. George'^, ii. Charles^, iii. Nancy^, m. 

Bell. iv. William^. 

V. Jane^ m. Todd. vi. John^. 

Trabue. XL Matilda O^ Trabue, b. Feb. 16, 1808 ; d, 1881 ; 
m., July 15, 1824, Amos Sutton Page, 315 



304 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

EdwarcPTrahue, m, 2d., Jane E. Clay, (p. 26Jt). 
Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. XII. Prince Edward^Trabue, b. Dec. 9, 1812; d. 

Trabue. Qct. 20, 1890 ; m., Oct. 30, 1834, Lydia Neville 

Page, 317 

Nancy H\ Trahue, m. Asa Pittman, (p. 302). Issue: 

Pittman. I. Edward Francis^ Pittman ; Settled in St. Louis, 
Mo.; b. Oct. G, 1818; d., Sherman, Tex., Mar. 6, 
1881; m., Nov. 13, 1860, Anne Harrison, b., 1838. 
Issue ' 

i. KatieS b. Aug. 28, 1861; m., Nov. 13, 1889, 
John B. Oldham. 

ii. Mary«, b. Oct. 20, 1863 ; d. Oct. 8, 1861. 
iii. . Edward F^, b. Feb. 10, 1867; m., Sept. 27, 
1893, Maye Wright. Issue : 
(i) Edward F'., b. Dec. 24, 1894; d. July 21, 
1896. (ii) George H"., b. Dec. 30. 1898. 
iv. George Harrison^ b. Oct. 10, 1869; m., Jan. 
8, 1902, Harriet Pen Dell. 
V. Annie BelleS b. Aug. 24, 1871. 
vi. Ida May% b. Aug. 28, 1874 ; m., Nov. 13, 1897, 
William H. Taylor. Issue : 
Taylor. (i) William H'., b. Feb. 11, 1899; d., 1902. 

Pittman. yii. James Harrison*^, b. Aug. 11, 1878. 

II. Martha Jane^Pittman, b. June 25, 1820; d. 

July 20, 1877; m., Mar. 12, 1845, Jesse Grady 

Crutclier, b. Nov. 23, 1812 ; d. July 23, 1868. Issue : 

Crutcher. j. Asa P^, b., Woodford Co., Ky., 1846. Lives 

near Terrell, Tex. 

ii. Isaac Henry«, b., Woodford Co., Ky., Oct. 22, 
1848 ; m. Louisa Taylor. Issue : 

(i) Isaac Henry^, m. . Issue: 1. Isaac 

Henrv^. 2. Son^. 

(ii) Earl', (iii) Carrie"; d. . (iv) Bon- 
ner^; d. . (v) Anna Lou^ b. May 18, 1885. 

(vi) Lem^. (vii) Josie^. (viii) Mary^; Last 
three died in infancy. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 305 



'Nancy H^. Trahue, m. Asa Pittman, (p. 302). Issue 

— Continued: 



C hap. II I. 
Crutcher. 



Stanley. 

Crutcher. 
Bateman. 



Crutcher. 



Wither- 
spoon. 



Crutcher. 



Williamson^ ; Last two died 



iii. Anne BelP. iv. 

in infancy. 

V. Kichard Lewis% b. Mar. 25, 1854 ; m., Dec. 3, 

1878, Emma Jane Stephens, b. Aug. 8, 1861. 

Issue: (i) Nellie Dixie^ b. Mar. 31, 1881; d. 

Oct. 31, 1881. 

(ii) Louis Clifford^ b. May 31, 1882. (iii) 

Lillian', b. Jan. 3, 1884; d. Sept. 1, 1884. 

(iv) Agnes White^ b. Aug. 15, 1885. (v) Ed- 
ward Vaughan^, b. Dec. 3, 1887. 

(vi) Richard Luther^ b. Nov. 5, 1889. (vii) 

Loulie May^ b. Jan. 24, 1892. 

(viii) Marcia Lelia^ b. Aug. 22, 1893. (ix) 

Emma J\, b. Sept. 18, 1895. 
vi. Anna Trabue% b. Aug. 17, 1855 ; d., 1888 ; m., 
Sept. 28, 1881, P. B. Stanley, b. Feb. 15, 1842. 
Issue: (i) Sallie Elizabeth^ b. June 28, 1883. 

(ii) Anna Trabue', b. Aug. 27, 1885. 
vii. Mary Dupuy% b. July 9, 1856; d. Mar. 20, 
1902; m., July 12, 1877, John Washington Bate- 
man, b. Mar. 11, 1843. Issue: (i) Ralph'^, b. 

June 21, 1878. (ii) Dupuy^ b. Jan. 20, 1880. 

(iii) Claude', b. Nov. 21, 1881. (iv) Jeffer- 

son^ b. June 21, 1883 ; d. Oct. 26, 1886. 

(v) John^ b. Aug. 21, 1886. (vi) Bennie 

May^ b. Jan. 1, 1889. 
viii. Jessie^*, Twin, b. Dec. 11, 1858; d. voung. 
ix. Mattie% Twin, b. Dec. 11, 1858; m., July 12, 
1877, Clifeord Witherspoon,, b. June 11, 1852. 
Issue: (i) Nellie"^, b. Feb. 3, 1880; d. Nov. 16, 

1890. (ii) Ford 

Guy Pittman'^, b, 

ford^ b. Mar. 12, 

b. Mar. 14, 1889. 

1893. 
X. Edward P^., b. 
Ferrell, Tex. 
xi. Flora Hattie^, 



C^., b. Dec. 30, 1881. (iii) 
Oct. 20, 1884. (iv) Clif- 

1887. (v) Horace Trabue^ 
(vi) Anna T/., b. Sept. 14, 

Feb. 22, 1861. Lives near 

b. July 29, 1862; m.. Long 



306 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. Ill 
Brown. 



Crutcher. 
Pittman. 



Ander- 
son. 

Pittman, 



Nancy H^. Trabue, m. Asa Pittman, (p. 302). Issue 

— Continued: 

View, Tex., Feb. 21, 1881, Robert Garland 

Brown, b. Feb. 2, 1852. Issue: (i) Robert Gar- 

land^ b. Aug. 7, 1882. 
(ii) Flora Hattie^ b. Nov. 7, 1884. (iii) An- 
nie B'., b. Aug. 11, 1887. (iv) John Crutcher^ 
b. Dee. 16, 1890. (v) Flora Frances^, b. Dec. 
11, 1892. (vi) Maggie Lynn^ b. Dec. 31, 1895. 
(vii) Mary Josephine'^, b. Aug. 12, 1897. (vlii) 
Samuel Bradford^, b. Apr., 1900, 

xii. Pittman^, b. Jan. 6, 1864. 

III. Benjamin^ Pittman; d. in infancy. 

IV. Williamson Haskins^Pittman; Settled in St. 
Louis, Mo., b. June 11, 1824 ; d. Oct. 21, 1875 ; m., 
July 5, 1859, Hannah Daviess, b. July, 1840. Issue : 

i. Nannie«, b. Nov. 13, 1861; m., Nov. 10, 1886, 
Archer Anderson. Issue : 

(i) Joan Hamillton^ b. Nov. 12, 1892; d., 

1902. 
ii. William Daviess^, b. Apr. 29, 1863; m., Oct. 
12, 1887, Sallie Duncan Patterson. Issue: (i) 

Velona^ b. Oct. 24, 1888; d. Apr. 7, 1898. 

(ii)Marie^ b. Feb. 23, 189L (iii) Cora% b. 

July 23, 1894. 
iii. Asa'', b. June 5, 1865; d. Jan. 11, 1899; m. 
Maysie Walker; d. Mar. 28, 1896. Issue: 

(i) Martha Walker^, b. Dec. 27, 1892. 
iv. Marie^ b. Jan. 29, 1868; d. July, 1868. 
V. Trabue^ b. June 20, 1870 ; m., Dec. 10, 1902, 
Louise Opel. 

vi. Williamson Haskins^ b. Mar. 21, 1872; d. 
Mar. 4, 1901. 

V. George Trabue^Pittman ; Settled in St. Louis, 
Mo. 

VI. Jefferson J^. Pittman ; d. young. VII. Eliza- 
beth J^ Pittman. VIII. Chas. T^ Pittman. 

iX. Ann Asa^Pittman; Educated at Greenville 
Institute, Harrodsburg, Ky., and at Madam Con- 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 307 

Na7icy H'^. Trahue, m. Asa Pittman, (p. 302). Issue 

— Continued: 

C hap. Il l, da's French Academy, New York City ; m. Zackary 
Pittman. Frederick^ Smith (p. 343). 

George W^. Trahue, m. Mrs. Elizabeth Chambers (p. 

303). Issue: 
Trabue. I. Joseph B^. Trabue, b., Glasgow, Ky., Dec. 22, 
1820 ; d. Mar. 27, 1845 ; m. Judith Mullins. 

11. Benjamin F^ Trabue, M. D., b., Glasgow, 
Ky., Oct. 6, 1822, m., June 12, 1855, Lelia Anderson. 
Issue: i. Henry Buckner*^, b. Mar. 19, 1856; m., 
1879, Kosa Drane. Issue : 
(i) Drane^ b., 1880. (ii) Anne Belle^, b., 
1882. (iii) Gordon Carlisle^ b., 1884. 
ii. Kate^ b. Sept. 28, 1858; m., Mar. 19, 1878, 
Joseph U. Rogers, b. Oct. 30, 1854. Issue : 
Rogers. (i) Lelia^ b. Mar. 12, 1879. (ii) Edmund L^, 

b. Aug. 19, 1883. (iii) Benjamin Trabue^ 
b. May 9, 1887. (iv) John^, b. Mar. 4, 1891. 
Trabue. iii- Helen^, b. Apr. 24, 1860; m., 1881, Jerry B. 

Leslie, Issue : 
Leslie. (i) Louisa^ b. Sept. 3, 1882. (ii) Lelia'^, b. 

Nov., 1885. (iii) Helen^. 
iv. Bennora«, b. Dec. 4, 1861; m.. Mar. 30, 1881, 
A. P. Terrell, Issue: (i) Clarence Monroe'^, b., 
1882. (ii) Allen Priced b., 1884. (iii) Lelia^ 
b., 1887. (iv) Katherine^ b., 1894. (v) George^ 
b., 1897. 
Trabue. III. Judith Helen^Trabue, b., Glasgow, Ky., Nov. 
16, 1824; d. Dec. 2, 1893; m. William Terrij, of 
Terry. Louisville, Ky. Issue : i. Mary^. ii. William^, iii. 

Alvah L^. ; m. . Issue : 

(1) John^. (ii) Alvah^. 
iv. Buford^. v. Maude^. 
Trabue. IV. Elizabeth Dupuv^Trabue, b., Glasgow, Ky., 
May 31, 1835; m., Dec. 1, 1853, Samuel W. Van- 
Van- CluUn of Philadelphia, Pa. Issue: i. Trabue^, b. 
Culin. Sept. 24, 1854. 

ii. Eliza% b. Oct. 5, 1856; m. Harper of 

Philadelphia, Pa. iii. Samuel W^, b. June 18, 



308 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

George W^. Trabue, m. Mrs. Elizabeth Chambers (p. 
203). Issue — Continued: 

Chap III 1859; d. Mar. 23, 1884. iv. William T^, b. July 

,^ ' 27, 1864; m. . Issue: (i) William T^. (ii) 

Cuiin. Trabue^. v. Dupuy^, b. Dec. 17, 1867. 
Trabue. V. George Washington^ Trabue, b., Glasgow, Ky., 
Jan. 21, 1839 ; d. Apr. 29, 1869 ; m., May 24, 1860, 
Mary T. Wade, of Glasgow, Ky. Issue : i. Buford®, 

b. Jan. 29, 1861 ; d. . 

ii. Elizabeth^ b. July 13, 1862; d. Nov. 1, 1863. 

iii. Nellie E^., b. Aug. 21, 1865; m. Lewis. 

iv. Bettie T^., b. Dee. 4, 1867; d. . 

Charles C^. Trabue, m. Agnes G. Woods, (p. 303). 

Issue: 

I. Martha Ann^Trabue, b. July 5, 1823; m. 
George T. Thompson. Issue: 
Thorn - ^' ^g^^® W^v ^- Greorge G. O'Bfyan. Issue: 
son. (i) Agnes Trabue'^. 

ii. Bessie'', m. J. P. W. Brown. Issue: 
Brown. (i) Geo. T^ (ii) Ella P'. (iii) John P. W% 

m. Anne Crockett, (iv) Samuel P'^. 
Thomp- iii. Chas. T®., m. Elizabeth Weeks. Issue:' (i) 
son. HilF. (ii) Fannie'^, (iii) Geo. 6'Bryan^. (iv) 

Allen W^. 

iv. Mattie W^. v. Fannie^, vi. HilP, m. Agnes 
M. Ricketts. 

vii. Jane R^., m. Alfred E. Howell. Issue : 
HoweU. (i) Morton B^. (ii) Martha'^. (iii) Pran- 

ces'^. ( iv ) < Louise E^. 
Thompson viii. Kate^, m. Joseph L. Wealdey. Issue: (i) 

Martha'^. 
Trabue. II. Anthony Edward Dupuy^Trabue, b. Apr. 2, 

1825; d. ; m. Christine Manley. Issue: 

i. Martha T''., m. Bragg Glasscock. Issue: 
Glass- (^) Ethel Green '^. (ii) Laura'^. (iii) Ray E^ 

cock. (iv) Stella Gertrude'^. 

Trabue. ii. Christine^, m. W. G. Robertson. Issue : 
Robert (i) Kittle R^(ii) Christine M^. (iii) Lucile^ 

son. ' (iv) William G^. (v) Agnes T^. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 309 

# 

Charles C^. Trdbue, m. Agnes G. WoodSj (p. 303). 
Issue — Continued: 

C hap. III . iii. Taylor Jones^, m. Honor Williamson. Issue : 
Trabue. (i)Van Culin"^. 

iv. Mary Glen^., b. July 1, 1874; m. Samuel D. 

Shaw. Issue: (i) Martha Glen'^, b. Sept. 15, 

1898. 

III. Joseph Woods^ Trabue, b. Feb. 4, 1827; 
Never married. 

IV. Jane W^ Trabue, b. Nov. 24, 1828 ; m. John 
H. Reynolds. Issue : 

Reynoias. i. Charles T^., m. Jennie Peyton. 

ii. John H®., m. Lottie Smith. Issue: (i) Wil- 
liam H^. (ii) John H^. 

iii. Alice A^. iv. Martha T^., m. John Adger. 
Issue: (i) Jane T'^. 

V. Anthony T^. vi. Geo. T^., m. Mary Bruner, 

Issue: (i) Mary^. (ii) Jane T^. 

Trabue. V. Sarah E^ Trabue, b. Apr. 29, 1«30; m. 1st., 

John B. Stevens; m. 2d., William R. Shivers. Issue 

Stevens, by 1st. m: i. Johnette B^., m. Cyrus S. Stecre. 

Issue: 
stecre. (i) Sarah^. (ii) Albert C^. (iii) Mable G^ 

(iv) Nellie L^, (v) Grace'^. (vi) Johnette^. 
(vii) Cyrus S^. 
Trabue. VI. Charles Clay^Trabue, b. Sept. 8, 1834; d. 
Sept. 19, 1862, of wounds in battle at Sharpsburg. 

VII. Robert Wood^Trabue, b. June 9, 1837; m. 
Mary Bibb. Issue : 

i. Joan*, b. Aug. 15, 1869; m., June 1, 1888, 
William Winn. Issue : 
Winn, (i) Nellie C. b. Mar. 18, 1894. (ii) Robert 

W^., b. June 9, 1895. (iii) George B^., b. Jan. 
5, 1899. 
Trabue. ii- Addie*, b. July 2, 1871; m. George M. Bris- 
coe. Issue : ( i ) Owen Trabue"^, b. Aug. 5, 1896. 
iii. Christine M«., b. Apr. 8, 1875. 

VIII. George W^ Trabue, b. Feb. 21, 1839; m. 
Ellen Dunn. Issue : 

i. Wm. Dunn^, m. Lucinda O'Bryan. Issue: (i) 



310 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Charles 0*. Trabue m. Agnes G. Woods, (p. 303). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. <^eo. O'B^. (ii) Wm. D^. (iii) Ellen Dunn^. 
Trabue "* Gr^orge^. iii. Charles C^. iv. Anthony E. 

T)6 

IX. James Woods^ Trabue; d. aged 9 years. 

Jane E^. Trahue, m. John W. Lewellen, (p. 303). 

Issue: 

Lewellen. I. Sarepta^Lewellen, b. Mar. 16, 1826; m. 1st., 

Mar. 16, 1843, Dooley Bibb; m. 2d., 1889, A. Kady. 

II. Araminta^ Lewellen, b. Feb. 24, 1828 ; m. 1st., 

Elias Owens; m. 2d., Charles Johnson. Issue by 

Owens. 1st. m: i. Mary Jane^. ii. Carson*^, iii. Frank^. 

iv. William Taylor*^. 
Lewellen. III. Adelia^Lewellen, b. May 2, 1830 ; d. Oct. 18, 
1848. 

IV. Agnes^ Lewellen, b. July 11, 1832; d. Dec. 5, 
1891; m., Oct. 28, 1852, Napoleon Lewellen (cous- 
in), b. Dec. 29, 1827. Issue: i. Mary Jane^, b., 
1853; d., 1873; m., 1872, Wm. Dickerson. 
ii. John Hosea^, b. Mar. 21, 1855; m., Dec. 8, 
1881, Jennie Toliver. Issue : 
(i) Nellie May^. (ii) Flory C^. (iii) Agnes 
T'^. (iv) Dennie B^. (v) Arty Bryan''^. (vi) 
Mabel Ruth^. 
iii. Roily B^, b. Jan. 27, 1857; m., Apr. 1, 1887, 
Larrie Moore. Issue : 
(i) Roy^. (ii) Gertrude'^, (iii) Agnes'^, (iv) 
Stella'^, (v) Napoleon'^, (vi) Eddie Bryant"^. 
iv. Sarepta E^, b. May 14, 1859 ; m. Dec. 8, 1881, 
James P. Alvis. Issue: 
Alvis. (i) John Napoleon*^, (ii) James O''^. (iii) 

Blanch O^. (iv) Rose^. 
LeweUen. V. James D^., b. July 23, 1861 ; m. 1st., Jan. 21, 
1883, Minerva Shoomaker. Issue: 
(i) Lulie B^.; m. 2d., 1890, Katie 

Pritchett. Issue : 

(ii) James W^. (iii) Clarence Napoleon'', (iv) 
Carrie'^. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 311 

Jane E^. Trdbiie, m. John W, Lewellen, (p. SOS). 
Issue — Continued : 
Chap. III. vi. Willis Napoleon^, b. Nov. 20, 1863 ; m., Feb. 
Leweiien. 15, 1898, Faunie Pritchett. Issue : 
(i) Napoleon^, b. Aug. 17, 1890. 
vii. Agnes L^, b. Feb. 24, 1866 ; m. 1st., Charles 
Render- Henderson Issue: 
son. (i) SeasiF; m. 2d., 1893, James M. 

Beatty. Issue : 
Beatty. (ii) Eddie Jack^. (iii) Ruby PearF. 

Leweiien. viii. Edward Lee% b. May 23, 1869 ; m., Feb. 28, 
1899, Leony B. Kayburn. Issue: (i) Vallye^, 
b., 1900. 

ix. Theodore C^, b. Nov. 10, 1871 ; m., Sept. 11, 
1895, Carrie Sisson. Issue: (i) Clark B^. (ii) 
Zelda^. 

X. Florence PearP, b. May 20, 1874; m., Apr. 
10, 1895. Thomas Smith. Issue: (i) PearF; 

d. . 

V. Jacob White^Lewellen, b. Mar. 19, 1834; d. 
Feb. 16, 1895; m. lst.,Nov. 6, 1856, Mary Boulevere, 
b., 1835 ; d., 1875. Issue : i. John Willis^ b. Aug. 
19, 1857 ;d. Nov. 16, 1886. 
ii. Dr. George Edward®, b. Mar. 31, 1859. 
iii. Nancy Jane®, b. Mar. 1, 1861; m., Dec. 29, 
Bnin 1879, Dock Harding Brunning. Issue : 

ning! (i) Mary N^., b. Oct. 8, 1880. (ii) Malissa 

Quinn^, b. Mar. 31, 1882. (iii) Emma J^., b. 
Sept. 14, 1883. (iv) Charles T^., b. Dec. 23, 
1885. (v) Jacob W^., b. Sept. 13, 1887. (vi) 
Nellie^ b. Sept. 4, 1889. vii. Elizabeth^ b. 
May 27, 1891. (viii) Llewellyn RusseF, b. 
Dec. 21, 1894. (ix) Eva Harding b. Sept. 19, 
1896. (x) Perkins^ b. Feb. 25, 1899. (xi) 
Leweiien. Hester O^., b. Nov. 9, 1900. 

iv. Martha Agnes®, b. Feb. 22, 1863. 
V. Josephine Quinn®, b. Feb. 14, 1865; d. Nov. 
26, 1892 ; m., Aug. 13, 1890, Eugene A. Waples. 
Issue : 
(i) Mortimer Lee^, b. May 21, 1891; d. Aug. 3, 
1892. 



312 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Jane E^. Trahue, m. John W. Lewellen^ (p. 303). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap.liL ^i- Chas. Trabue^ (Llewellyn, p. 303) ; attorney 

lI^- ^* ^^wj ^- ^^^y ^} 186'^ J ^'f Oct. 5, 1891, Emma 
lyn. Kulluck. Issue : 

(i) Dorothy Kulluck^, b. Jan. 5, 1898. 
Leweiien vli. Mary Grace^, b. Oct. 3, 1874; d. Aug. 10, 
1875. 
Jacob White^ Leweiien, m. 2d., 1877, Olivia M. 
Sexsmith, b., 1846. Issue: 

viii. Mary Sexsmith^, b. Oct. 12, 1879. ix. 
Maude Myrtle^, b. Sept. 16, 1881. 
X. William Claude®, b. May 22, 1883 ; d. May 25, 
1883. xi. Josie Endora% b. Sept. 12, 1884. 
xii. Edith Ann«, b., 1886. xiii. Marcus Earl«, 
b. July 28, 1889; d. Nov. 28, 1891. 
VI. Susan E^. Leweiien, b. Oct. 22, 1836 ; d. Jan. 
31, 1885; m., Feb. 24, 1859, Harvey Scanland. 
Issue : 
Scaniand. i- Cora«, b. Aug. 6, 1860; m., Sept. 3, 1884, John 

Clarkson Darnell, M. D. Issue : 
Darnell (i) Edna Lou^ b. Jan. 13, 1886. (ii) PauF, 

b. Oct. 20, 1888. (iii) Floy Llewellyn^ b. 
Feb. 20, 1891. 
Scaniand. "• Edgar^ b. Sept. 8, 1862; m.. May 23, 1888, 
Bertie Virginia Hobson. Issue: 
(i) Alma^ b. Feb. 28, 1889. (ii) Telina^ b. 
Oct. 2, 1890. (iii) Nellie^ b. Dec. 6, 1892. 
(iv) Harvey Hobson'^, b. Aug. 5, 1895. (v) 
Mary Elizabeth^ b. Feb. 12, 1899. 
(vi) Charles Boone^ b. June 26, 1901. 
iii. Minnie^ b. Oct. 9, 1869; m., Feb. 5, 1896, 
Edgar L. Collins. Issue: (i) Harry S'^., b. 

Mar. 20, 1897. 
iv. Nellie®, b. Dec. 11, 1874. v. Grace®, b. July 
22, 1877. 
Leweiien. VII. Cynthia Ann^Lewellen, b. Oct. 6, 1839; d. 
Dec. 1, 1880; m.. Mar. 21, 1868, Judge Thomas 
Russell, b., Washington Co., Pa., June 2, 1820; d., 
Moulton, la., Nov. 15, 1888. Issue: 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 313 



Jane E*. Troljue, m. John W. Lewellen, (p. 303). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap- III. i. Arthur Lewellen^, b. Dec. 30, 1867; m., Dec. 
RusseiL 23, 1891, Lula A. McGarbin. Issue : 

(i) Hazel Graced b. Sept. 22, 1894. (ii) 
Charles Lawrence^, b. Dec. 20, 1896. (iii) Lula 
May', b. Jan. 4, 1899. (iv) Arthur Emerson^, 
b. Feb. 13, 1901. 
li. Carrie Agnes% b. Oct. 7, 1869; d. July 19, 
1871. 

iii. Rev. Harvey^, b., Schuyler Co., Mo., May 
31, 1871; d. Nov. 6, 1895; m. Mary Wells, 
iv. Lonius% b. Oct. 15, 1872; m., Dec. 13, 1891, 
Martha Henderson. Issue: 
(i) Icel Ines^ b. July 24, 1894. (ii) Law- 
rence^ b. Oct. 23, 1896. (iii) Minnie Oecir, b. 
Nov. 13, 1897. (iv) Myrtle Fay^ b. Oct. 23, 
1900. 
V. Eva Josephine^, b., Schuyler Co., Mo., Aug. 
28, 1874; m., Sept. 15, 1897, J. Price Sutton; 
(Cashier of the Faber Bank, Faber, Mo.) 
vi. Edward^, b. Sept. 30, 1875. vii. Charles 
Eugene^ b. May, 1880 ; d. Auj?., 1880. 
Lewellen. VIII. Samuel Edward^Lewellen ; Soldier in the 
0. S. A., under Gen. Price, b. June 27, 1842; m., 

Feb. 15, 1874, Sallie Crews; d. . Issue: i. 

Martha Jane®, b. and d., 1875. 

ii. Benjamin Franklin®, b. Nov. 6, 1876; d., 

1896. iii. Geo. Washington®, b. and d. 1878. iv. 

Irene®, b., 1879; d., 1894. v. Jacob Edward®, b. 

May, 1881. vi. Lulie Crews®, b. Apr., 1888. 

IX. Miranda Louisa^Lewellen, b. Sept. 10, 1845; 

m., Apr. 25, 1871 , Robert Graham, b., 1849. Issue: 

Graham. 1. Neva Josephine®, b. June, 1872; m., June, 

1898, F. B. Moore. Issue : 
Moore. (i) Irene Louisa^, b. Mar. 23, 1899; d. Aug. 2, 

1900. 
Graham. ii- John Robert®, b. June, 1874. 

iii. Jamie May®, b. May, 1876; m., Oct., 1897, 
J. F. Crane. Issue: 



314 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Jane E*. Trabue, m. John W. Lewellen, (p. SOS), 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. (i) Vernon Earnest^b. Aug., 1898. (ii) Viola 
Crane. Marie^, b. June, 1901. 

Graham. iv. Ester Agnes'^, b. Sept. 3, 1878; d. Feb. 11, 
1880. V. Son% b. Feb. 14, 1881; d. Mar. 3, 1881. 
vi. Claude Alexander^, b. 1883. vii. Doc. Sam- 
uel, b., 1886. 
Lewellen. X. Martha Matilda Josepbine^Lewellen, b. Mar. 
21, 1849; m. 1st., Jan. 11, 1877, Coldwell Russell; 
m. 2d., 1882, Charles Lillie. Issue by 2d. m : 
Liiiie i- Charles Lewellen^, b. Mar. 24, 1884. ii. John 

William^, b. Jan. 23, 1886. 
iii. Antoine Trabue^ | ^ j^^^ ^^ -^ggg 
IV. Lonius Clay*', ) 

Cynthia A"*. Trahue, m. Taylor Jones, (p. SOS), 

Issue: 

Jones. I. Elizabeth Jane^ Jones, b. Jan. 1, 1830 ; d. Aug. 
16, 1833. 

II. Sallie Ann5 Jones, b. Feb. 21, 1832; d. Sept. 
29, 1833. 

III. Henry Clay^ Jones, b. Apr. 20, 1834 ; d. Apr. 
18, 1899 ; m., Dec. 5, 1872, Annie Tutt, b. Oct. 12. 
1847. 

IV. Martha Agnes^ Jones, b. Nov. 28, 1836; d. 
May 26, 1878; m., Nov. 29, 1866, Wm. Broivn. 
Issue : 

Brown. i. Charlotte Eugenia^ b. Oct. 27, 1869; m., Mar. 
Carstar- ^^' 1889, Wm. Robert Car star phin, b., Mar. 9, 
phin. 1863. Issue: (i) Wm. Eugene'^, b. June 7, 

1800. (ii) James Henry^ b. Oct. 3, 1891. 
(iii) Ezra Thomas^ b. June 5, 1894. (iv) 
Mary^, b. Apr. 5, 1898. 
Brown. ii. Mary Louise^, Twin, b. Aug. 20, 1872. 

iii. Cynthia Jane^, Twin, b. Aug. 20, 1872; d. 
Nov. i, 1873. 
Jones. V. Margaret Emily^ Jones, b. Nov. 6, 1839; m., 
Jan. 17, 1860, Samuel T. ^Yatson, b. June 30, 1834. 



LINE OF JOHN JAJ^IES^DUPUY. 315 

Cynthia A^. Trahue, m. Taylor Jones, (p. 303). 
Issue — Continued: 

C hap. III . Issue: 1. Dr. Taylor Jones^ b., 1860; m., 1886, 
Watson. Amanda Suter. 

ii. Julia% b. 1862 ; m., 1887, Gentry Fugua. Is- 
sue: (i) Warren^, b., 1891. (ii) Saml. Henry ^, 

b., 189i. 
iii. Elizabeth^, b., 1865; m., 1885, Thos. T. 
Moore. Issue: (i) Maggie May'^, b., 1886. 
Moore. (ii) Linn^, b., 1889. (iii) Rory% b., 1892. 

(iv) Hugh% b., 1895. 
Watson. iv- James T^., b., 1867. v. Olivia^, b. Apr. 2, 
1871 ; m., 1896, Wm. T. Waters, M. D., b. July 
31, 1868. 

vi. William C^, b. Mar. 30, 1873; m., 1901, Dol- 
lie Bridgewater. vii. Margaret^, b. May 28, 
1883. 
Jones ^1- Susan Ellen^ Jones, b. May 16, 1842 ; m., Oct. 
28, 1866, Asa Glascock, b. June 22, 1838; d. Feb. 
12, 1892. Issue : 
Glascock. i. Anna Taylor*', b. Oct. 11, 1867; m., Oct. 29, 
1896, P. J. Li/?/(7. Issue: (i) Leo^ b., Feb. 24, 
1901. 

ii. Henry Clay^ b. Oct. 3, 1869 ; d. Feb. 27, 1901 ; 
m., Jan. 27, 1897, Julia S. Caldwell. Issue: 
(i) Asa^ b. July 22, 1898. (ii) Henry Stan- 
ley^ b. Feb. 22, 1900. 
iii. Margaret Geneva®, b. Jan. 13, 1873. 
Jones. VII. Charlotte Frelingbuysen^ Jones, b. Oct. 17, 
1844; d. Dec. 26, 1866. 

Matilda 0*. Trahue, m. Amos Sutton (p. 303). 

Issue: 

Sutton. I. Sarah Jane^Sutton, b. May 3, 1825; m. Oar- 
son Wright. Issue : 

Wright. i. Mary^. ii. Penelopv®. iii. Araminta®. 

Sutton. II. Davis Biggs^ Sutton, b. June 7, 1827. Never 
married. 

III. Eliazar Clay^Sutton, b. Sept. 19, 1829; m., 
Sept. 19, 1870, Belie Toliver. Issue: 



316 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Matilda 0*. Trahue, m. Amos Sutton (p. 303). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . i. Maggie E^., b. Oct. 31, 1871 ; m., Mar. 10, 1892, 
Sutton. W. D. Homes. Issue: (i) Gilbert Clay^, b. 
Jan. 20, 1893. 

ii. Matilda Alice% b. July 16, 1873; m.. May 7, 
1893, George Gaines, iii. Davis Anthony^, b., 
Feb. 3, 1875. iv. Emma V^., b. Jan. 2, 1877. v. 
Nathaniel C\, b. Sept. 10, 1878. vi. Eliza^, b. 
Aug. 2, 1880; d. July 15, 1881. vii. George 
Vests, b. Sept. 15, 1882. 

IV. Nathaniel HilP Sutton, b. Dec. 31, 1832. 

V. Edward Trabue^ Sutton, b. June 6, 1834; m., 
Feb. 11, 1858, Amanda B. Turley, b. Mar. 13, 1838. 
Issue : 

i. Charles BelP, b. Dec. 10, 1858; m.. Mar. 13, 

1878, Matilda Leadford. Issue : 
(i) George Edward^ b. May 25, 1882. (ii) 
Lonia Eugene'^, b. Sept. 29, 1884. (iii) Lottie 
Alice'^, b. June 8, 1888. (iv) Chalmer Lee 
Beir, b. Jan. 16, 1895. 

VI. Joanna Eliza^ Sutton, b. Dec. 19, 1836; m.. 
May 7, 1857, James T. Keithley, b. Nov. 1, 1836. 
Issue : 

Keithley. i- Phyanna^, b. Feb. 26, 1858; m., Mar. 11, 1884, 
John Johnson. Issue: (i) Stella E''^., b. Sept. 
18, 1886. ii. Matilda Agnes^ b. Aug. 27, 1862 ; 
m., Dec. 22, 1897, J. O. Caldwell, iii. Mary 
Alice^ b. Oct. 18, 1864. iv. Virginia Lee«, b. 
May 14, 1867; m., June 7, 1892, Claude Eayden. 
Issue : 

Hayden. (i) Lester Bradley^, b. May 28, 1893. 

Keithley. V. Henry Clay Bates^, b. June 5, 1874. 

Sutton. VII. Anthony Benton^ Sutton, b. Apr. 3, 1840; 
Killed in battle in the C. S. A. 

VIII. Matilda Agnes'^ Sutton, b. Apr. 1, 1843. 

IX. John Polk^ Sutton, b. May 9, 1845. 

X. Clara Catharine Alice^ Sutton, b. Mar. 14, 
1850; d. Dec. 11, 1895; m. 1st, June 23, 1870, John 

Spencer. F. Spencer. Issue : i. Clara B^., b., 1873 ; d., 1891 ; 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 317 



Matilda 0^. Trahiie, m. Amos Sutton (p. 303). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . ni. 2d., June, 7, 1877, A. E. Jenkins. Issue: ii. 
jenjdns. Emma Lee% b. Mar. 28, 1878. 

Prince E^. Trahue, m. Lydia NevUhj (p. 304). 

Issue: 
Trabue. I. William E^. Trabue, b. Dee. 17, 1835; m., 1862, 
Matilda Summers. Issue: 

i. Mary B«., b. July 9, 1863; d. Oct. 3, 1865. 
ii. J. William^, b. Oct. 17, 1865; m., Feb. 11, 
1886, Lucy B. Beeby, b. Aug. 9, 1867. Issue : 
(i) Katherine^ b, 1887; d., 1888. (ii) John 
T^., b., 1889. (iii) Charles E^, b., 1891. 
(iv) Stella A^., b., 1892. (v) William E^., b., 
1896. (vi) Lewis B'., b., 1901. 
iii. Emma V^, b. Dec. 25, 1872 ; d. Mar. 25, 1880. 
iv. Sarah E^., b. Nov. 9, 1882; d. July 17, 1883. 

II. Charles Clay^Trabue, b., 1838 ; m., 1885, Jane 
Conley. Issue: i. Ruth% b., 1886. 

III. Elizabeth Jane^Trabue, b., 1841; m., 1859, 
John Summers. Issue: 

i. Marv Elizabeth^ b. and d., 1860. ii. Anna 

Perliot% b., 1861; m., 1882, . iii. Edward 

Washington^, b., 1864 ; m., 1887. Herman Mitts. 
iv. John W^, b., 1867; m., 1891, Bell Braden. 
Issue : 
(i) Charles Eugene^ b., 1893. (ii) Howard% 

b., 1895. 
V. George Anthony^ b., 1870. vi. Sadie«, b. 
and d., 1872. vii. Lottie Belle% b., 1874; m., 
1895, Richard Frankin. Issue: 

(i) Ora^ b., 1895. (ii) Minnie Belief b., 

1901. 
viii. Verdia«, b., 1877; m. L. Pittman. ix. 
Nora«, b., 1880; m., 1901, George Menefer. x. 
Harry«, b., 1883. 

IV. Mohala Ann^Trabue, b., 1844; m. Thomas 
Raredon. Issue : 

Raredon. i. Chrissie Anthony^', b., 1876; m., 1897, John 
W. Demorcst. Issue: (i) Thomas'^ b., 1898. 



Sum- 
mers. 



Franklin. 

Sum- 
mers. 



Trabue. 



318 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Prince E*. Trabue, m. Lydia Neville, (p. 201^). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. II I. ii. Nora J^., b., 1878; m. George Devenport. 
Raredon. iii. Nannie C^., b., 1880; m., 1897, Wm. T. 

Jo?ies. Issue: (i) Dorothy^ b., 1899. 
Trabue. V. Lucy P^ Trabue, b., 1847; d. 1897; m., 1862, 

Humprey Jones. Issue : 
Jones. i. Cora^, b., 1865; m., 1886, Joseph Smith. 
Issue: (i) Justin^, b., 1889. (ii) Edgar "^j b. 
1894. (iii) Zana^ b., 190L 
Trabue. VI. Nancy Agnes^Trabue, b., 1850 ; m., 1879, Si- 
meon Ross. Issue : 
Ross. i. Bertha^, b., 1880. ii. Carle^, b., 1883. iii. 

Clarence^ b., 1887. iv. Irene Blanche*^, b., 1889. 
V. Simeon Milan^ b., 1892. 
Trabue. VII. John Thomas^ Trabue, b., 1853; m., 1899, — 
Issue one^. 

Stephen^Trahue, m. Jane Haskins, (p. 264). Issue: 

1. Chastain^Trabue, b. Nov. 25, 1786; d., 1852; 
m., Elizabeth^Trabue (p. 266). Issue: 

i. Stephen Fitz James^; Lawyer; m. Alice 
Berry ; ( Sister of Col. Robert Berry of the U. S. 
N. ) Issue : 
(i) Edmund F*'., m. Carrie Cockran. Issue: 1 

and 2, TVins%- d . 2. Lucinda^. 

(ii) Stephen Fitz James*', m. Annie South, of 
Frankfort, Ky; (Daughter of Rev. Polk South 
(Christian). Issue: 1. Virginia Taylor^, 
(iii) Willet C^., m. Mrs. Belle Moore Dabney. 

(iv) Robert B^. (v) Alice E^., d. . 

ii. Aaron^ ; d. . iii. Marian^ ; d. in youth. 

iv. Infant^ ; d. . v. William^, d. a bachelor. 

vi. Henrietta^, m. Milus Cooper Neshitt, M. D. ; 
(Son of Judge Geo. Nesbitt). Issue: 
Nesbitt. (i) Eliza^ ; d. in infancy, (ii) Marian^; d. in 

infancy, (iii) Milus^. 
Trabue. vii. Isaac Hodgen^ ; Lawyer ; Transylvania Uni- 
versity, Lexington, Ky., 1854; Officer in the U. 
S. A. during the Civil War; Staunch Republi- 



LINE OF JOHN JAMEgiDUPUY. 319 

Stephen^Trabue, m. Jane Haskins, (p. 264). Issue 

— Continued: 

Chap. II I. can; b., Eussell Co., Ky., Mar. 25, 1829; m., 
Trabue. Savannah, Ga., 1865, Virginia Taylor; Emi- 
grated to Fla. 

viii. Elizabeth^ m. Charles W. McGill. 

Mac- i^- JudelP; d. June 22, 1900; m. Thomas A. 

Gregor. MacGregor, M. D. Issue: (i) Chastine^, m., 

Nov., 1899, Ernest W. Sprague. Issue : 1. Chas- 

Sprague. tine^, b. Nov. 1902. 2. Matilda^, x. Henry^, 

d. young. 
Trabue. II. Eebecca^Trabue, b. Aug. 3, 1789; m. John 
Hill;d. June 15, 1834. 

III. Haskins D^ Trabue, b. Dec. 24, 1790 ; d. Feb. 
13, 1860; m., Nov. 20, 1816, Olympia^Willson (p. 
324) Page, 320 

IV. Aaron^Trabue, b. Jan. 12, 1793; d. Dec. 29, 
1877; m. 1st., Apr. 6, 1819, Martha^Trabue (p. 

303) Page, 323 

m. 2d, Dec. 7, 1835, Martha Cheatham, b., 1809 ; d. 
Oct. 26, 1893. Lived near Jerseyville, 111. Page, 324 

V. William^Trabue, b. Mar. 7, 1795; m. 1st. 
Elizabeth McDowell. Issue: 

i. Emily^, m. John Lewis, ii. Elizabeth Ann^, 

m. David Winston, iii. Hannah J^., m. 1st. 

Lindsey Watson ; m. 2d. Robert Anderson, iv. 

Harriet Olvmpia^, m. Joseph Winston. Issue: 
(i) Joseph K«. 

V. Benjamin McDowelP, M. D., b. 1826; m. Fan- 
nie E. Sale, daughter of Dr. L. P., of Todd Co., 

Kv. Issue: 
(i) William H^., b., 1855, Manager of the 
Kelly Axe Co., N. Y. Cty; m. Corinne Fall 
Boyd, (ii) Leroy P®., M. D., m. Maria Jeffer- 
son, (iii) Helen M^., m. E. U. Bland, (iv) 
Ben. McDowell^, m. Bessie Morrison, (v) 
Elizabeth Burns^, unmarried, (vi) Jennie^, 
d. aged 3 years, (vii) Annie B^., m. H. P. 
Gray. (viii) Mattie Y^., unmarried. (ix) 
Etta H*^., unmarried. 



320 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Stephen^Trabue, m. Jane HasTcins, (p. 264). Issue 

— Continued : 

C hap. II I. vi. William^ ; d. in infancy. 
Trabue. William^Trabue, m. 2d. Elizabeth Haskins^ Cald- 
well (p. 284). Issue: 

vii. Laura Alice^; d. Nov., 1875; m. John D. 

Wickliffe. Issue : 

Wickiiffe. (i) Mary^ ; d. in infancy, (ii) Trabue^, b. 

Mar. 27, 1869. (iii) Lily Logan% b. Dec. 25, 

1870; m., Feb. 10, 1897, Henry R. Turner. 

Issue: 1. Geo. R'., b. Nov. 12, 1897. (iv) 

Alice% d. in infancy, (v) John D^ b. Mar. 

5, 1874. (vi) Nathaniel d. in infancy. 

Trabue. ^"i" ^^ancy Lucretia^ d. Feb., 1892; m. F. C. 

Shearer. Issue : 
Shearer. (i) William Trabue^, m. Eliza Petty. Issue: 

1. Mary^. 2. Trabue^. 3. Corinne^. 4. Eva^. 
5. Infant^. 

(ii) Harry Junius^, (iii) Elizabeth Victory^. 
(iv) Thomas Marshall^. 

(v) Nannie Alice®, m. James Taylor. Issue: 
1. Frank'^. 2. James MarshalF. 
Trabue. i^- Matilda Jane^, unmarried, x. Lucy Ellen^, 
unmarried, xi. Edward Haskins^. 

VI. Edward^Trabue, b. Nov., 1798 ; m. Mary Rog- 
ers. 

VII. Frances^Trabue, b. Aug. 11, 1800; d. Mar., 
1838; m. Claiborne^Wooldridge (p. 299). 

VIII. Elizabeth^Trabue, b. Feb. 7, 1804 ; m. Wm. 
Gill. IX. John Jas^ Trabue, b. Feb. 7, 1806; d. 
Mar. 1, 1808. 

HasJcins D^. Trahue, m. Olympia'^WiUson, (p. 319). 

Issue: 

Trabue. ^' Fenelon^Trabue, b., 1818; d. Dec. 16, 1898; m., 
1844, Martha Merryweather, b., 1826-7. Issue : 
i. Infant% b. and d., 1845. ii. Olympiad b., 1847; 
d. May 21,1893. iii. Infant% b. and d., 1848. 
iv. Letitia®, b. June 1, 1850 ; d., 1875 ; m., 1874, 
Cassius Hatcher. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 321 



C hap. II I. 
Trabue. 



McCanse. 



Trabue. 



Kitz- 
miller 

Trabue. 



Haskins D^. Trabue, m. Olympia'^Willson, (p. 319). 
Issue — Continued: 

V. Luther^, b., 1852; m., 1879, Sarah Harlan, b., 
1850. Issue: (i) PauF, b. May, 1880. 
(ii) and iii. Lyman^and Lolah^, T'wins, b. May 
29, 1882. 
vi. Marian^, b., 1854 ; m., 1891, Robert McCanse. 
Issue : 
(i) Gordon Trabue^. (ii) Fenelon^. (iii) 
Frank^. (iv) Hugh^ 
vii. Haskins^, b. Apr. 2, 1860; m. Lucy Bill. 
viii. Aaron^, b., 1866. 

II. Eliza Jane^Trabue, b., 1820 ; m., 1864, Barna- 
bas Boggess, b., 1809 ; d. June 3, 1888. 

IIL Stephen^Trabue, b., 1822; d. Mar. 16, 1867; 
m., 1854, Mary Boyd ; d. Jan., 1862. Issue : 

i. Emma^, b., 1855; d., 1883; m., 1882, Marshall 
Stein. Issue: (i) Eeta% b., 1883 ; d., 1890. 
ii. Ednah% b. and d., 1857. iii. Lucy Virginia^, 
b. July 20, 1858 d. Apr. 2, 1898 ; m., June, 1891, 
MWion Kit zmiller. Issue: (i) Laura Trabue% 
b. Feb. 7, 1893. 

iv. Charles Edward^ b. May, 1860; m., 1885, 
Daro Ferine. Issue: (i) PauF, b., 1886. 

(ii) Ednah^ b., 1888. (iii) Archer^ b., 1893. 
V. Edmonia*', b. and d., 1862. 
IV. Joseph Haskins^Trabue, b. Jan. 11, 1825; d. 
Nov. 11, 1882; m., 1849, Martha Augusta Parks, b. 
Dec. 21, 1828. Issue : 

i. Mary Elizabeth^, b. July 10, 1850 ; m., Jan. 22, 
1891, Thomas Edward Evans, b., 1888. 
ii. John Walter^, b. Oct. 11, 1852; d. Dec. 21, 
1870. 

iii. Wm. Benjamin^, b., 1854; m., June 15, 1898, 
Estella Tunnell, b. Jan., 1871. Issue: 
(i) Benjamin TunnelF, b. May 25, 1899. (ii) 
Son^ b. Feb. 22, 1901. 
iv. James Parks^ b., 1857; m., Feb. 13, 1885, 
Elenor Welch, b., 1863 ; d. Mar. 24, 1888. Issue : 



322 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

EasJcins D^. Trdbue, m. Olympia'^Willson, (p. 319). 
Issue — Continued: 

Chap.llL (i) Ruth Elizabeth^ b. Mar. 4, 1886. (ii) 

Trabue. Raymond Welch^, b., Mar. and d. Aug., 1888. 

V. Annie Letitia% b. Sept. 27, 1859. 
vi. Edward Haskins*^, b. Sept. 26, 1861 ; m., Dec. 
23, 1897, Amy Ruth Richards, b. June, 1866. 
vii. Josephine Augusta*^, b. Nov. 21, 1867. viii. 
Martha Agnes% b. Feb. 13, 1870. 

V. Benjamin^Trabue, b. Jan. 7, 1828; d. Sept. 
13, 1867 ; m., Oct., 1862, Ada O. Putnam. Issue : 

i. Edwin Putnam*', b., 1863 ; m., Dec, 1885, May 
Anderson. Issue: (i) Benjamin^, b. July, 1892. 
ii. Harriets b., 1865; d. Sept., 1867. iii. Benja- 
mina Julia^, b. June, 1867. 

VI. Rebecca ¥^. Trabue, b., 1830; d., 1831. 

VII. John Wilson-^Trabue, b., 1832; d. Jan. 18, 
1899; m., 1859, Elizabeth Law; d. Nov. 11, 1890. 
Issue : 

i. Infant^ b. and d. 1860. ii. Robt. Henry^, b., 
1861. iii. Wm. Law*', b., 1863. iv. James^, b., 
1866. 

VIII. William Aaron^Trabue, b. June 15, 1834; 
d., 1835. 

IX. Edward^Trabue, b. May 9, 1837 ; d. Mar. 1, 
1855. 

X. Isaac Hodgens^Trabue, b. Dec. 11, 1840; d. 
Oct. 14, 1867. 

XL Mary Olympia^Trabue, b. May 20, 1844 ; m., 
Mar. 6, 1869, Theodore O. Bailey, b., 1844. Issue: 
Bailey. i. Nannie Olympia®, b. Jan. 14, 1870; m., Apr., 
I'^^l, 'Roj Johnston. Issue: 
Johnston. (i) Elmer^ b., 1892. (ii) Lillian^ b., 1894. 

(iii) Mary Elizabeth^ b. Mar., 1900. 
Bailey. ii- Hodgie T^., b. Jan., 1874. iii. Infant^, b. Dec. 
7 and d. Dec. 25, 1876. 

iv. Clinton% b., 1878. v. Olando Trabue«, b., 
1880. vi. Milton Fenelon", b., 1884. 
vii. Eliza Johnaphine^, b. Jan. 1888. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 323 

Aaron^Trahiie, m. 1st. Martlia^Trdbue, (p. 319). 

Issue: 

C hap. II I. I. Mary Jane^Trabue, b. June 21, 1820 ; d. Nov. 6, 
Trabue. 1852; m. Ocean Blevins. Issue: 
Bievins. I Mary^, m. A. G. Turner, ii. Hester^, m. 1st., 

Perry Lustore. Issue: 
Lustore. (i) Edward^ (ii) Tulla^. (iii) Perry^; m. 

2d. Marshall. Issue: (iv) Son'^. 

Trabue. II. Miranda^ Trabue, b. Oct. 1, 1821; d. Apr. 29, 
Cheat- 1856; m. Claiborne Clieatliam. Issue: 
ham. i. Emma'', m. William Bates. Issue : 

Bates. (i) Myra'^. (ii) Gertrude'^, (iii) Lorena'^. (iv) 

Cheat- Charles''', (v) William^, 

ham, ii. Charles^, iii. Aaron^. 

Trabue. m. Margaret^ Trabue, b. July 4, 1823; d. Mar. 
18, 1898. Never married. 

IV. Edward^Trabue, b. Mar. 1, 1825; d. Jan. 2, 
1900; m., 1849, Elizabeth Nihell, b., 1829; d., 1867. 
Issue: i. Emma^, b. Aug. 5, 1850; m., Jan. 10, 
1877, Jno. E. Andrews, b. Mar. 26, 1852. Issue: 
Andrews. (i) Pheobe E^., b. July l25, 1884. 

Trabue. ii. Murray B^, b. June 16, 1853; m., Oct. 18, 
1883, Rosetta Owens, b., 1858. 
iii. Lawrence^, b. Feb. 5, 1855; d. Apr. 3, 1866. 
iv. Phoebe N«., b., 1857; d., 1858. 
V. Phoebe N«., b. Julv 14, 1860; m. Nov. 14, 
1883, Allen O. Baruett. Issue: 
Barnett. (i) Mary E^., b. Mav 16, 1885. (ii) Emma 

E^., b. Mar. 8, 1887. 
Trabue. vi. Elizabeth^, b. July 30, 1862 ; m., Apr. 5, 1889, 

Otis D. Leach, b. Oct., 1860. Issue: 
Leach. (i) Elizabeth^, b. Oct. 26, 1894. 

Trabue. V. Ann Eliza"Trabue, b. Dec. 23, 1826; d. Apr. 
30, 1850; m. Benjamin Tullis, M. D. Issue: 

TuUis. i. Alice^. ii. Edward'', m. . Issue: (i) 

Alice'^. (ii) Lena'^. (iii) Benjamin"^, (iv) Harry"^. 
Trabue. VI. Rebecca F^. Trabue, b. July 17, 1828; d. June 
15, 1853 ; m. James B. Clark. Issue 2. 

VII. America'''Trabue, b. Apr. 18, 1830; d., 
1883; m. 1st., Miles Rhodes. Issue: 



324 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Aaron^Trahue, m. 1st. Martha'^Trdhue, (p. 319). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. i. Haskins^. ii. Docea^. m. 2d. William Badg- 
Rhodes. ley. Issue : 
Badgiey. iii. Sherman^, iv. Margaret^. 

Aaron^Trabue, m. 2d. Martha Cheatham (p. 319), 

Issue: 

Trabue. VIII. Harriet N^ Trabue, b. Nov. 23, 1836. 

IX. Letitia^Trabue, b. July 27, 1838; m., Oct. 19, 
1857, Jacob S. Darhy. Issue : 

Darby. i. Daughter^, m. . ii. Son^, m. . 

Trabue. X. Martha G^ Trabue, b. Apr. 29, 1840; d. Oct. 
5, 1877 ; m., Nov. 22, 1860, A. Todd Linberger. 

XI. Maviah N^ Trabue, b, Apr. 18, 1843. XII. 
Flavius J^ Trabue, b. Feb. 12, 1846. 

XIII. Aaron^Trabue, b. Sept. 3, 1848 ; d. June 10, 
1862. XIV. Roselvn^ Trabue, b. Mar. 13, 1851. 

XV. Ellen F^. Trabue, b. June 19, 1855 ; m., Oct. 
19, 1875, John H. Simmons. Issue : 
Simmons. i- Aaron Trabue^. 

Elizaheth^Trahue, m. Fenelon R. Willson, (p. 26JfJ, 

Issue: 

WiUson. I. Rev. John Slater^Willson ; Pastor of the First 
Baptist Church of Louisville, Ky. ; b. July 12, 1795 ; 
d. Aug. 28, 1835; m.. May 11, 1818, Martha Wagge- 
ner, b. Mar. 6, 1796; d. Aug., 1844 Below. 

II. Leatitia^Willson, b. May 2, 1797; d. in in- 
fancy. 

III. Olympia^Willson, b. Nov. 20, 1798 ; d. Dec. 2, 
1860; m., Nov. 20, 1816, Haskins D^ Trabue (p. 
319). 

Rev. John 8\ Willson, m. Martha Waggener, — 

above. Issue: 

WiUson. I. Ermina Slater^Willson, b. Aug. 5, 1819; d. 

July 31, 1869 ; m., Jan. 1, 1840, Isaac N. Halhert, b. 

Haibert. Feb. 14, 1814 ; d. Jan. 7, 1851. Issue : i. Martha 

W^ b. July 12, 1841; d. Nov. 18, 1876. Never 

married. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 325 



Chap. ni. 

Halbert. 
Buck. 



Latti- 
more. 



Rev. John S^. Willson, m. Martha Waggener, (p. 
324). Issue — Continued: 

ii. Mary C^'., b. Jan. 20, 1844 ; m., July 3, 1865, 

Giddings J. Buck, b. Apr. 4, 1840. Issue : 

(i) Ermine Field^, b. Apr. 23, 1866; m. June 

28, 1890, O. Shivers Lattlmore, b. Jan. 10, 1865. 

Issue : 

1. Offa S^., b. July 28, 1891. 2. Halbert S«., 



11, 
5. 



b. Sept. 10, 1892. 3. John Lee^ b. Mar. 
1894. 4. Wm. Buck^ b. May 31, 1895. 
Kobt. Bakery b. May 23, 1896. 6. Oliver 
b. May 3, 1898 ; d. Aug. 17, 1898. 
Buck, (ii) Miriam Olivet b. Feb. 25, 1868. 

(iii) Raymond H^., b. July 8, 1870; m., Nov. 
28, 1891, Eula Blackmore, b. Feb. 23, 1868. 
Issue : 1. Mary A^., b. Feb. 11, 1893. 2. Ray- 
mond^ b. Julv 13, 1894. 

(iv) Mary D'., b. Dec. 5, 1872; d. May 3, 1876. 
(v) Geddings Judson^, b. Apr. 21, 1877; d. 
Mar. 31, 1895. 

(vi) Ollie Halbert^ b. Mar. 12, 1879. (vii) 
Nellie Faulkner^ b. Oct. 17, 1881. 
(viii) Harrison D^., b. Feb. 15, 1887. 
Halbert. iii. Charles Query«, b. Apr. 11, 1846; m., Dec. 
27, 1869, Nannie Brown. Issue : 
(i) Benjamin"^, (ii) Gay'^. (iii) Ermine H'^. 
(iv) Leila^. (v) Allied (vi) Maude^. (vii) 
Charlie'^, 
iv. Oliver Isaac^ M. D., b. Oct. 10, 1849; m. 
Lela Kisher, b. July 25, 1859. Issue : 
(i) Olive Marv^ b. Sept. 14, 1881. (ii) Ada 
Ben^ b. Aug. 9, 1883. (iii) Bessie^, (iv) 
Alethia^. (v) Lillian'^. 

(vi) Kisher^. (vii) Ermine^ b. Oct. 10, 1892. 

(viii) Nannie Clare"^. (ix) Mildred'''. 

Wiiison. II. Leatitia^Willson, b. Jan. 17, 1821 ; d. Jan. 18, 

1849; m., Oct. 15, 1840, Andrew T. Heth, b. June 4, 

1814 ; d. Mar. 7, 1877. Issue : 

Heth. i. John Willson«, b. Aug. 25, 1841; d. June 7, 

1885; m., Oct. 28, 1869, JFlorinda Allen. Issue: 



326 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. III . 
Heth. 



Rev. John S^. Willson, m. Martha Waggener, (p. 
324). Issue — Continued: 

(i) Annie'^. (ii) Blanche'^, (iii) Artumea'^. 
ii. Bettie May^ b. Sept. 27, 1843 ; m., Feb. 15, 
1869, W. E. Collard; (Judge of Court of Civil 
Appeals for the Third Supreme Judicial Dis- 



.trict of Texas) ; b. Oct. 3, 1839. 



Collard. 



Willson. 



Issue : 
7, 1874. 



(ii) 



Bagby. 



Carring- 
ton. 



Bagby. 



(i) Hallie Garnett^, b. Apr. 

Roger Lee'^, b. Oct. 1, 1876; m. Florence King. 

(iii) Willie E^., b. Jan. 9, 1879, iii. Leatitia*^. 

III. Luther M^ Willson, b. Mar. 18, 1822; d. Oct. 
14, 1835. 

IV. Mary Franklin^Willson, b. Jan. 31, 1824 ; d. 
Oct. 22, 1883; m., Mar. 18, 1843, James H. Baghy. 
Issue : 

i. Henry Dudley^ b. Feb. 11, 1844; d., in battle 

of Civil War, May 18, 1864. 

ii. Luther William^ b. Aug., 1846. 

iii. Ermine C^., b. Dec. 16, 1848; m., Jan. 23, 

1879, John S. Carrington, M. D., b. Mar. 7, 1833 ; 

d. Oct. 12, 1885. Issue: (i) Wood B^., b. Nov. 

20, 1879. 

iv. Rev. Wm. Buck^ ; Missionary of the Baptist 

Church to Brazil, S. A., since 1880; b. Nov. 11, 

1855 ; m,. 1880, Anne Luther, b. Mar. 20, 2856. 

Issue : 

(i) Ermine^ b. July 25, 1881. (ii) Luther 
H^., b. July 10, 1883 ; d., 1886. (iii) Taylor^ 
b. May 29, 1885. (iv) Willie J'., b. Feb. 5, 
1888. (v) John T^., b. June 10, 1891 ; d. Aug., 
1892. (vi) Oliver H'., b. Aug. 5, 1893. (vii) 
Alice Anne^ b. June 20, 1896. 
V. James Franklin®, b. Aug. 14, 1857; m., Mar. 
4, 1885, Sallie Rowe, b. Julv 14, 1858. Issue : 

(i) George W^., b. Apr. 30, 1887. (ii) Frank- 
lin^ b. Sept. 20, 1888. (iii) Raymond^ b. June 
1, 1891. , 

(iv) Mary Lou^, b. May 23, 1894. (v) Ermine 
A^., b. Sept. 22, 1896; d. Feb. 24, 1897. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMESiDUPUY. 327 



Rev. John 8^. Willson, m. Martha Waggener, (p. 
324). Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. V. Hester Elizabeth^ Willson, b. Apr. 21, 1826; d. 

Willson. Sept. 8, 1870 ; in., Mar. 2, 1848, B. N. Herring, M. 

Herring. D., b. Aug. 9, 1821; d., 1898. Issue: i. Hodgen 
Elmore^, b. Jan. 6, 1849; d. aged 16 yrs. 
ii. Herbert Owen^, b. Sept. 11, 1850 ; d. aged one 
year. 

ill. Ermina Halbert®, b. May 23, 1852; m., June 
3, 1884, Rev. James Godfrey Patton; (South 
Western Presbyterian University, Tenn., B. A.; 
Divinity School of same, 1886; Licensed and 
ordained by the Presbytery of Nashville, June, 
1886; Pastor, Westminster, Nashville, Tenn., 
1887-88; First Church, Orlando, Fla. 3 yrs; Sec- 
ond church, Henderson, Ky., 5 yrs. ; Decatur, 

Ga., Sept., 1897 ; Traveled in Palestine and 

Eastern Countries) ; b., Wilson Co., Tenn., Sept. 
25,1855. Issue: 

Patton, (i) Clemmie^ b. May 7, 1885. (ii) Anna^ b. 

May 29, 1888. (iii) James G^., b. May 22, 
1896. 

Herring. iv. Oathleen^, b. Dec. 25, 1857; d. aged 2 yrs. 

V. Benjamin G^'., b. Nov. 13, I860: m., Nov. 15, 
1886, Jennie Black, b. Oct. 3, 1864. Issue : 
(i) Kathleen^, b. Sept. 1, 1887. (ii) Hallie^ 
b. Dec. 11, 1889. (iii) Margerv^ b. Nov. 29, 

1891. (iv) Emily Stewart^ b. Nov. 6, 1896. 
vi. Clemmie% b. Mar. 1, 1863 ; m., June 7, 1888, 
Rev. Charles Pier Colmery, b., Carrollton, Miss; 
(South Western Presbyterian University, 
Tenn. ; Divinity School of same, 1888; Licensed, 
Oct. 18, 1888, and Ordained, Oct. 19, 1888, by 
the Presbytery of Central Mississippi; Pastor, 
of Edwards, Osborne, and Yoken, Miss., Oct., 
1888 ) Issue: 

Colmery. (i) Anna^ b. June 3, 1889. (ii) William G^. 

b. Oct. 21, 1890. (iii) Hallie^ b. Feb. 27, 

1892. (iv) Benjamin^ b. Aug. 1, 1894. (v) 
Clemmie^ b. June 8, 1899. 



328 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Rev. John S^. Willson, m. Martha Waggener, (p. 
324). Issue — Continued: 

Chapjtii. yi^ Hodgen Isaac^ Willson ; Georgetown College, 

WiUson. Ky. ; Editor, with his sons, of the "Taylor Weekly 

Texan/' Taylor, Tex. ; b. June 29, 1828; m. 1st. June 

22, 1852, Elizabeth Otwell; ni. 2d., Apr., 1870, Allie 

Denman. Issue bv 1st. m : 

i. Parker OtwelP; Joint owner and Editor of 
the ''Taylor Weekly Texan," Taylor, Tex.; b. 
Mar. 24, 1853; m., Feb. 22, 1882, Delia Goode. 
Issue : 
(i) Herbert G^., b. July 28, 1885. (ii) Lot- 
tie L^, b. Oct. 6, 1887. 
ii. Martha Leatitia«, b. May 2, 1855; m., 1881, 
Henry A. Crossett, b. July 26, 1855. Issue : 
Crossett. (i) Thaddeus^, b. Mar. 9, 1882. (ii) Otweir, 

b. Apr. 3, 1884. (iii) Willie M^., b. Apr. 25, 
1889. (iv) E. Delia^ b. Aug. 22, 1892. (v) 
Hodgen H^., b. Aug. 29, 1897. 
WiUson. iii. Howard E^. ; joint owner and Editor of the 
"Taylor Weekly Texan," Taylor, Tex. ; b. Sept. 
7, 1858; d. Apr. 18, 1906; m., Sept. 16, 
1886, Ida Ross, b. Oct. 31, 1867. Issue: (i) 
Harold', b. Jan. 6, 1888. 

(ii) Ross^ b. Dec. 24, 1888. (iii) Lelene^ b. 
Aug. 7, 1890. (iv) Edith^ b. July 6, 189L 
iv. Frederick William«, b. July 29, 1866. 
Hodgen F., m. 2d. Denman. Issue: 

V. Hodgen Isaac^ b. Feb. 29, 1872; d., 1879. 
vi. Olive Dupuys, b. Feb. 18, 1876. vii. Johna- 
phine S^, b. Jan. 26, 1878. 
VII. Sallie Garnett^ Willson, b. Nov. 24, 1830 ; d. 
June 29, 1884 ; m.. Mar. 24, 1862, Theodore Bland, 
b. Mar. 17, 1825; (Probably a descendant of Theo- 
- dore Bland, who settled at Westover, Charles City 
Co., Va., in 1654, and died in 1671; an old and 
highly respected English family). Issue: 
Bland. i. Mary L^., b. July 16, 1863 ; m., Oct. 21, 1891, 

Virginius E. Muir, b. Oct. 24, 1862. Issue : 
Muir. (i) Bettie Lee^, b. Sept. 15, 1892. (ii) Theo- 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 329 

Rev. John S.^Willson, m. Martha Waggener, (p. 
32JfJ. Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. dore G^., b. Nov. 21, 1893. 
Bland ii- Joiin Bacon^ b. Feb. 7, 1867. iii. Robert T«, 

b. June 13, 1869 ; m.. Mar. 10, 1897, Lucy Shook. 
WUison. VIII. John J°. Willson, b. Oct. 9, 1833 ; d. Aug. 8, 
1834. 

IX. Johnaphine Slater^ Willson, b. Apr. 18, 1836 ; 
m., Oct. 2, 1862, Lee Faulkner, b. Jan. 14, 1826 ; d. 
Sept. 21, 1873. Issue: 
Faulkner. i. Bettie Lee*', b. Sept. 7, 1863 ; m., July 2, 189&, 
Rev. Marshall D. Early; (Pastor of the First 
Baptist Church, of Morristown, Tenn.) Issue: 
Early. (i) Mary^, b. Aug. 18, 1896. 

Faulkner. ii- Nellie F^., b. Oct. 25, 1867; m., Oct. 19, 1886, 
Robert H. Baker, b. Sept. 4, 1859. Issue : 
Baker (i) M. Burk^ b. Aug. 9, 1887. (ii) Nellie^ b. 

May 5, 1895. (iii) Elizabeth^ b. Nov. 10, 
1902. 
Faulkner. iii- Ernest Lee®, b. Mar. 1, 1870; m., Jan. 8, 
1896, Elizabeth S. Davis, b. May 5, 1876. Issue : 
(i) Alice^, b. Oct. 25, 1896. (ii) Ernest Lee^ 
b. Jan. 6, 1899. (iii) Davis A^., b. July 16, 
1902. 
iv. Fleet C^, b. June 11, 1872 ; d. aged 5 yrs. 

Susanna^ Trahue, m. Thomas Major, fp. 265). Issue: 

Major. I. Olive Trabue^Major, b. Jan. 14, 1794; m. 
Nancy Gunnell Below. 

II. John James^Major, b. May 26, 1795 ; d. Dec. 
1, 1876 ; m.. May 8, 1849, Louisa Susanna Lewis, b. 
Feb. 1, 1808. No Issue : 

III. Elizabeth Redd^Major, b. Feb. 1, 1802; m. 
John Tnrley Gunnell Page 331 

Olive T^. Major, m. Nancy Gunnell, (above). Issue: 

1. Susan Dupuy^Major, b. June 14, 1821; m., 
June 14, 1849, Thos. Edmondson^Gregorv, (p. 283). 
IL Allen G^ Major; Dentist; b. Jan. 21, 1823. 



330 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Olive T*. Major, m. Nancy Gunnell, (p. 329). Issue 

— Continued: 



C hap. II I. 

Major. 

Fackler. 



Death- 
ridge. 

Fackler. 



McGoffin. 

Fackler. 

Major. 



Stewart. 
Major. 



Grim- 
shaw. 



Major. 



III. Elizabeth^Major, b. Jan. 26, 1825; m. George 
Fackler. Issue : 

i. Laura« 1 ^^.^^^ f d. . 

ii. Elizabeth^ j \ m. Charles Deathridge. 

Issue : 

(i) Lillian^, (ii) Marian'^, (iii) Fackler'^. 

iii. Marian^, d. ; m. Charles Deathridge. 

Issue: (i) Charles. 

iv. Nancy^, m. Elijah McGoffin; d. . Issue : 

(i) Bariah"^. (ii) RusselF; d. . (iii) 

Ebb^ (iv) George^. 
V. Carrie^, m. L. Watts. Issue: (i) Carrie'^; 
d. . (ii) William'^; d. . 

IV. Albert^Major, b. Jan. 16, 1827; m. Martha 
Fackler. 

V. Thomas T^ Major; Dentist; b. Mar. 4, 1829; 
d. June 22, 1902; m. 1st., Apr. 2, 1850, Rachel 
Lewis, b. Apr. 2, 1832 ; d. Aug. 9, 1858 ; m. 2d., Sept. 
15, 1864, Mattie Buckner, b. May 2, 1832 ; d. Apr. 
14, 1899. Issue by 1st. m. 

i. Margaret^ b. Jan. 12, 1851 ; m., Nov. 24, 1875, 
John Stewart. Issue : 

(i) Stella^ b. Aug. 16, 1876. (ii) Elizabeth^ 

b. Dec. 13, 1877. 
ii. Elizabeth^, b. Nov. 25, 1853. iii. William^, b. 
Feb., 1855, lived 7 days. 

iv. Nancy% b. Sept. 14, 1856 ; m., June 27, 1878, 
Jona T. Grimshau\ b. Nov. 28, 1852. Issue : 

(i) Thomas T^, b. Apr. 12, 1879. (ii) Lelia^ 

b. Nov. 13, 1880. (iii) Guy^ b. May 16, 1889. 

(iv) Edwin^ b. May 18, 1893. 

Issue of Thos. T^. by his 2d. m : 
V. Olive^, b., 1866, lived two weeks, vi. Sallie^, 
b. May 23, 1868. 

vii. Thomas^, b. Apr., 1870, lived one day. 
vili. George^, b. Mar. 31, 1871; m., Sept.^3, 1900, 
Irene Major. Issue: (i) John Thos"^., b. Oct. 
3, 1902. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 331 

Olive T^. Major, m. Nancy Gunnell, (p. 329). Issue 

— Continued: 

C hap. II I. ix. Anna May% b. Sept. 11, 1874. 
Major. VI. Margaret^ Major, b. May 25, 1831; d. Nov. 6, 

1857 ; m. Charles Houston. Issue : 
Houston. i. Laura*^, b. Sept. 4, 1855; m., Dec. 27, 1882, 

Henry Scearce; d. . Issue : 

Scearce. (i) Ruhamah% b. Jan. 5, 1884. (ii) Lewis% 

b. Nov. 26, 1885. (iii) Charlie^ b. Apr. 1, 
1887. 
Houston. ii. Noble^, b. June 27, 1857. 
Major. VII. John^Major, b. June 11, 1833. 

VIII. Minor^Major; In the Secret Service of the 
C. S. A., and at one time President Lincoln offered 
a large reward for his capture; b. Aug. 10, 1835; 
m., Oct. 2, 1866, Sallie Thomson. Issue: i. Olive 

Ma^lius^ b. Dec. 6, 1867. 

ii. Mary Temple^ b. May 8, 1869 ; m., Feb. 21, 

1896, Oscar Sweeny. Issue: 

Sweeny. (i) Minor Major^ b. Feb. 12, 1897. (ii) Oscar 

T^, b. Aug. 2, 1899. 

Major. iii. Albert Minor*', b. July 7, 1871; m., Jan. 1, 
1894, Martha Wagner. Issue : 

(i) Minor Wagner^ b. Aug. 4, 1897. 
iv. J. McGaevey*' ; University of Missouri ; Su- 
perintendent of Public Schools of Missouri; b. 
Apr. 9, 1873; m., Dec. 27, 1899, Lydia Wallace. 

IX. Laura^ Major, b. Feb. 10, 1838. 

X. Olivia^Major; m., 1863, Alexander Carlyle. 
Issue : 

Carlyle. i. Lutie^, m. Benjamin Small. Issue: 
Small. (i) Eva^. (ii) Olivia^, (iii) Nellie^, (iv) 

Lutie'^. (v) Benjamin'^. 

Carlyle. ii- Claddius^. iii. Alva^. 
Major. XI. Alva Curtis^Major. 

Elizabeth R\ Major, m. John T. Gunnell, (p. 329). 

Issue: 

Gunnell. I. Thomas Allen^Gunnell ; Moved from Kentucky 
to Missouri and became a large slave owner; Dur- 



332 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Elizabeth B^. Major, m. John T. Gunnell, (p. 329). 
Issue — Continued: 

Chap^iLing the Civil War was a strong Unionist and a 
GunneU. stauncli supportor of Abraham Lincoln, and of the 
Republican Party; In 1882, moved to Colorado 
Springs, Colo., and retired from public life; b., 
Hopkinsville, Ky., Jan. 13, 1821; m.. May 4, 1847, 
Marian Wallace Thomson, b. July 26, 1821; d., 
Buena Vista, Colo., Mar. 15, 1896; (Daughter of 
Gen. David Thomson, of Ky). Issue: 

i. Allen Thomson*'; Bethany College, W. Va.; 
Studied law under Messrs. Phillips and Vest, of 
Sedalia, Mo., and was admitted to the Bar in 
1871 ; Moved to Colorado in 1874 ; Practiced law 
in Leadville, Lake City, and is the Senior mem- 
ber of the firm of "Gunnell, Chinn and Miller," 
of Colorado Springes, Colo. ; General counsellor 
for the Portland Gold Mining Company ; a life- 
long Democrat; b.. Saline Co., Mo., Jan. 29, 
1848; m., Oct. 20, 1872, Elizabeth Hancock, b., 
Hopkinsville, Ky., June 1, 1851; (Daughter of 
Rev. T. W. Hancock, who moved to Missouri in 
1856). Issue: 
(i) Allen White^ b. July 28, 1873; m.. May 
26, 1902, Maude Gillette, b. Dec. 25, 1880. 
Issue : 1. Allen Ewing^, b. Feb. 21, 1903. 
(ii) Seddie^ b. May 22, 1875; m., Nov. 16, 
1898, Clarence Clarh Hamlin, of Colorado 
Springs, Colo., b. Jan. 7, 1868. Issue: 
Hamlin. 1. Elizabeth^, b. Dec. 16, 1901. 2. Clark Gun- 

nelP, b. Oct. 6, 1904. 
Gunnell. ii. Volney Clarence*'; Christian University, 
Canton, Mo., 1870-71 ; Merchandized, 1872-73, at 
Burdett, Bates Co., Mo.; In 1874, became a 
resident of Pleasant Hill, Mo., and began the 
study of law; admitted to the Bar at Harrison- 
ville, Mo., 1878; In October, 1879, moved to 
Leadville, Colo., and practised law until Apr. 
1889, when he removed with his family to Og- 
den, Utah, where he has since practised law; a 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 333 



Elizabeth R^. Major, m. John T. Ounnell, (p. 329). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap, n i. Eepublican in Politics ; b., Saline Co., Mo., Aug. 
Gunneii. 12, 1851; m.,near Elmwood, Saline Co., Mo., Oct. 
2, 1872, Elizabeth Medora Small, b., Logan Co., 
Ky., July 23, 1852; d., Ogden, Utah, Nov. 7, 
1892 ; ( Educated at the Baptist Female College, 
of Lexington, Mo. ) Issue : 
(i) Clarence Smith'^, b.. Saline Co., Mo., Oct. 
15, 1873 ; m., Dec. 8, 1903, Eoxanna Farr Pid- 
cock, b., Ogden, Utah, Aug. 25, 1879. Issue : 
1. JHorna^, b., Ogden, Utah, Sept. 4, 1904. 
(ii) Alva Hernden^; Ogden High School, 
Utah; Prospected 2 years through Utah and 
Idaho; In 1897, went to Eastern Oregon, where 
he spent about 5 yrs. as office boy, assistant as- 
sayer, assayer, and metallurgist for a number 
of Mines, sampling-works, and Cyanide plants 
of the mining region; Member of the firm of 
Foster and Gunnell, western managers for the 
New York and Western Mines Company; b., 
Saline Co., Mo., Aug. 27, 1875; m., San Fran- 
cisco, Cal., Jan. 31, 1904, Laura Gertrude 
Thomas, b., Marion Co., Ore., Apr. 4, 1878. 
Issue: 1. Margaret Elizabeth^, b.. Grant's 
Pass, Ore., June 8, 1905. 

(iii) Myrtle Boon^, b.. Saline Co., Mo., Sept. 
IG, 1877; d., Ogden, Utah, Nov. 18, 1901. (iv) 
David Garfield', b., Buena Vista, Colo., Nov. 
19, 1881. (v) Volnev Thompson^, b., Buena 
Vista, Colo., Mar. 22, 1885. (vi) Tvv Kate"^ b., 
Buena Vista, Colo., Sept. 29, 1880. (vii) Allie 
Marion^ b., Ogden, Utah, Apr. 25, 1890. 
iii. Evelyn^, b., Feb. 3, 1856; m., Dec. 24, 1878, 
John Bradley, b. Apr. 7, 1848. Issue : 
Bradley (^ MabeU, b. Nov. 24, 1879. (ii) Jennie^ b. 

Feb. 24, 188L (iii) Thomas^ b. Dec. 22, 1884. 
(iv) John^ b. Oct. 1, 1886. (v) Eugene', b. 
Nov. 10, 1888. (vi) Melcena^ b. Apr. 6, 1892. 



334 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. II I. 
GunnelL 



Aliens- 
worth. 



Major. 



Hawks. 

Landee. 
Hawks. 



Elizabeth RK Major, m. John T. Gunnell, (p. 329). 
Issue — Continued: 

iv. Kate Belief b. June 26, 1858; d. Jan. 30, 

1890. 

V. Marion Lucile^, b. July 18, 1861; d. May 10, 

1893; m., Apr. 16, 1884, James T. Allensworth. 

Issue: (i) Allen P^ 

Judith^Trahue, m. John Major, (p. 266). Issue: 

I. William T*. Major, b., 1790; d., 1867; m., 1812, 
Margaret Sliipp, b., 1792 ; d., 1882. Issue : 

i. Elizabeth A^, b., 1813; d., 1888; m., 1835, 
Matthew Houston Haioks, b., 1804; d. 1882. 
Issue : 
(i) Margaret Major^, b. Oct. 30, 1835; m., Nov. 
15, 1854, Richard M. Landee, b. Sept. 5, 1830. 
Issue : 
1. DoUie'^, m. Richard Fray. 2. Killie^, m. 
Bevington. 



Reeves. 

Hawks. 
Major. 
Allen. 

Major. 
Warriner. 

Major. 



(ii) Mary Ellen«, b. Aug. 9, 1841; m., Oct. 30, 
1862, Owen T. Reeves; (Judge of the Circuit 
and Appelate Courts of Illinois for 14 yrs.) ; 
b. Dec. 18, 1829. Issue : 

1. Lucy'^, m. Jame^ John. Issue: (1) Owen T^. 

2. Owen''', m. Emma Hodge. Issue: (1) Mar- 
ion^. 3. William^. 4. Houston'^. 

(iii) Thomas Jefferson^, b. June 30, 1848; m., 

Jan., 1876, Nellie Buchanan, 
ii. Judith Ann Trabue^ b., 1814; m., 1838, Will- 
iam H. Allen; d. . Issue: 

( i ) Susan^, m. Walker. 

(ii) Edward®, m. . Issue: 1 

Walter Rogers. 2. Allison''^. 
iii. Laura Louisa^, b. 1816; d. — 



Carrie'^, m. 



Richard O. Warriner, M. D., d 

( i ) Adelaide®, m. Tyler. 

— Shell. 



m., 1836, 



(ii) Cora®, m. 

iv. William Horace^, 



. Issue: 

Issue: 1. PauF. 
(iii) Belle®. 



b., 1818 ; d. in infancy. 



V. Ann Maria Shipp^,b., 1820; m. John A. Jones; 
d. ; ( Clerk of the U. S. Court for 25 yrs ; a 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 335 

Judith^Trabue, m. John Major, (p. 266). Issue 

— Continued: 

Ch ap. II I. close friend of Abraham Lincoln). Issue: (i) 
Jones. James*^ ; Successor to his father in clerkship. 
Major. vi- Laban Shipp^, b., 1822; m. twice, vii. Jno. 
Milton% b., 1824 ; m. Adeline Elkins. Issue: (i) 
William^. 

viii. James Shipp^, b., 1826 ; m. thrice, ix. Mar- 
garet^, b., 1830 ; d., aged 18 yrs. 

X. William Trabue^, b., 1833; d. ; m. Sarah 

Gebhart. Issue : 
(i) Eugene®, (ii) Lewis Allen®, (iii) Laura®. 
IL John^Major, b., 1792; m. Eliza Williams. 

III. Joseph^Major, b., 1794; d., 1817; m. 

Catlett. 

IV. Benjamin^Major, b., 1796; d., 1852; m., 1820, 
Lucy Davenport. 

V. Chastine^Major, b., 1799; m. Johanna Hop- 
kins. 

VL Elizaniajor, b., 1801; m. William Daven- 
port, b. Aug. 25, 1801 ; d., 1852. Issue : 
Daven- i- William^, ii. Chester^, iii. Benjamin^, iv. 
port. Jackson^. 

Bartholomew^Dupuy, m. Mary Mottley, (p. 260). 

Issue: 

Dupuy. I. Achsah^Dupuy, m. Benjamin Davis. Both died 
with cholera in 1822. No issue. 

IL Susanna^Dupuy. III. JoePDupuy, m. Lucy 
Craig. No issue. 

IV. Elizabeth^Dupuy, m. Fogg. Issue : 

Fogg. i. Mary^, m. Rev. Joseph Taylor, ii. John"*, iii. 
Elizabeth^, iv. Benjamin^. 
V. Joel"*, vi. Dione*. vii. Lucy^. viii. Joseph^ 
Dupuy. V- John^Dupuy; Enlisted in the Revolution, 
aged 18 yrs., and served 5 yrs. Never married. 
VL Judith^Dupuy, m. William Samuel. Issue: 
Samuel. i. Washington*, m. Grey. Issue: (i) Elea- 
nor', (ii) Benjamin^, (iii) Edmond''. (iv) 
Richard^. Others. 



336 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Bartholomew^Dupuy, m. Mary Mottley, (p. 260). 
Issue — Continued: 
C hap. II I. ii. Mary Mottley*, m. David Castleman Suggett. 
Samuel Issue : 
Suggett. (i) Lucy^. (ii) Judith^. (iii) Benjamin^. 

(iv) SamueP (v) Soplirina^, m. Offutt. 

Issue : 1. Manly Dupuy*^, and others. 
Dupuy. VII. James^Dupuy. Never married. 

VIII. Nancy^Dupuy, m. Abram McClure. Issue: 

McCiure. i- Achsah*, m. Basey. ii. Mary*, m. 

Campbell. 

iii. Alexander*, m. Webb. Issue 8 or 9, 

who settled in Paducah, Ky., and in Tenn. 

iv. Samuel*, v. Abraham*, m. . Issue, 1 

or more. vi. William*. 

vii. Bartlett*, m. Ann Ashby; Moved to Texas 
where his wife killed 3 Comanche Indians in 
defense of herself and children. 
Dupuy. IX. Martha^Dupuy; d., 1836; m. Col. Abram 
Owen, of Henry Co., Ky; b., Prince Edward Co., 
Va., 1769 ; Killed at the Battle of Tippecanoe, Nov. 
7, 1811; (Col. Abram Owen emigrated from Vir- 
ginia, with his family, in 1785,- and settled at 
Owen's Station, near Shelbyville, Ky. He was act- 
ive in the defense of the country, first rendering 
service with Gen. Wilkinson in his Wabash cam- 
paign. He was an officer under St. Clair, and was 
with Col. Hardin in the action near White river. 
He commanded the first company raised in Shelby 
Co., Ky., and rendered valuable service in Wayne's 
Expedition. Soon afterwards he was elected to the 
State Legislature, and in 1799 was a member of the 
constitutional convention, afterwards a member of 
the State Senate. In 1811, he was the first from 
Kentucky to join Harrison, serving as aide-de-camp, 
and fell in the front of battle, leading bravely the 
charge to victory. As Soldier, Citizen and public 
Servant, no man was more beloved, and no man's 
death was more lamented in Kentucky. Owen 
County of the State was named for him). 
Page, 337 



LINE OF JOHN JAMEgiDUPUY. 337 



BartholomGW^Dupuy, m. Mary Mottley, (p. 260). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. I II. X. Joseph^^Dupuy, b., Nottoway Co., Va., Mar. 8, 
Dupuy. 1765; d. June 22, 1815; m., Jefferson Co., Ky., June 

25, 1798, Nancy Peay, b., Caroline Co., Va., Jan. 

19, 1777; d. Sept. 13, 1840. They settled in Henry 

Co., Ky Page, 342 

XI. Sallie^Dupuy, b., 17G7 ; d. May IG, 1851 ; m. 

Poindexter Thomasson Page, 347 

Matha^Dupuy, m. Col. Ahram Owen, (p. 336). 

Issue: 

Owen. I. James Dupuy'Owen; Killed in 1836 at the 
battle of San Jacinto, Tex., under Gen. Houston. 

II. Clarke Lewis^Owen; Fought the Indians in 
the pioneer days of Texas; Killed in the C. S. A., at 
the battle of Shiloh, Apr., 1863 ; m. Laura Wells, of 
Jackson Co., Tex. Issue: 

i. Jane^. ii. Abram^, m. White. Issue 

two. 

iii. Martha^, m. . Issue three, iv. Laura'', 

m. Rotvlett. Issue five. 



V. James D^., m, 



White. Issue four. vi. 

Coleman. Issue two. 



Smith. 



Rowland. 



Smith. 



Frank"^, m. — 
III. HarriefOwen, m. Thomas Smith, of New 
Castle, Ky. Issue: 

i. Abram Owen^, m. Hunter. Issue: (i) 

Eobert". (u) Harriet^, (iii) Jeanie^. 

(iv) Martha®, (v) Thomas''', (vi) Abram®. 

(vii) Owen®, 
ii. Pev. Thomas D^, (Baptist). 
iii. Martha Ann^, m. Georsje I. Roioland. Issue: 

(i) and (ii) Thos. Smith and Georn:e, Twins®. 

(iii) Martha®, (iv) Elizabeth®, 
iv. Harriet-^, m. William J?oit77a??r7, Issue: (i) 
Thomas®, (ii) Henry®. 

V. Nicholas^', m. Smith of Missouri, vi. 

Elizabeth^ m. John G. Peck, 
vii. Clarke Owen^, m. Lizzie P. Lithyon. Issue: 

(i) IMeme®, m. Frank M. Lampton. Issue: 1 

Clarke S^. 



338 GENEALOGY WITH BKIEF SKETCHES. 



Ch ap. IIL 
Smith. 



Owen. 
Woolfork. 



Owen. 



Smith. 

Cooper. 

Gum- 
ming. 

Cooper. 
Smith. 



Callaway, 



Matha^Dupuy, m. Col. Ahram Owen, (p. 336). 
Issue — Continued : 

(ii) James Lithyon^, m. Sadie Hanfon. Issue: 
1. Horace Hanfon^. 

(iii) Walter Owen^. viii. William^, ix. Jo- 
seph^. X. James^. 

IV. Nancy^Owen, m. Turner Woolfork. Issue : 
i. Eobert Owen^. ii. George^, iii. James Aus- 
tin^, m. . Issue: (i) James^. 

iv. Martha J^., m. Winslow. Issue: (i) 

Henry M^., President & Gen. Manager of The 
Harriman Land Co., Tenn. 

V. Elizabeth^Owen ; d. Aug. 12, 1833 ; m., Oct. 27, 
1818, Daniel Brannin, (his 1st m. p. 356), b., 1797; 
d. Jan. 25, 1862 Page, 339 

VI. Lucy Wooten^Owen, m. William Smith. 
Issue : 

i. Susan Allen^, m. James E. Cooper. Issue: 
(i) William S^ 

(ii) Susanne^, m. W. M. Cumming. Issue: 1. 
James D^. 2. Kate^. 3. Mary^. 4. Wm. 
Cooper'^. 
( iii ) J. Owen®, m. Mary Owsley. 

ii. Annie Elizabeth^, m. R. P. Samuel, iii. 

James^, d. single. 

iv. Martha Owen^, m.. Mar. 27, 1888, Edwm 

Callaway. Issue : 
(i) Frances R^., m. Rev. Alex. Doak McClure, 
b., Lewisburg, Tenn., July 9, 1850; (Princeton 
College, N. J., B. A., 1874; A. M., 1877; 
Princeton Theological Seminary, 1879; Li- 
censed, May, 1877, by the Pby. of Columbia; 
Ordained, Apr., 1878, by the Pby. of North Mis- 
sissippi; Pastor of Oxford, Miss., 1877-80, of 
Bardstown, Ky., 1880-82, of Highland, Louis- 
ville, Ky., 1882-88, of Maryland, Ave., Bait. 
Md., 1888-91, of St. Andrew, Wilmington, N. 

C, 1891 ; Author of "Another Comforter," 

1897; D. D., 1901). Issue: 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 339 

Matha^Dupuy, m. Col. Ahram Owen, (p. 336). 
Issue — Continued: 

Ch ap. II I. 1. Kobert Edwin^, b. Apr. 16, 1897, 2. Eliza- 

McCiure. beth Lyle% b. Sept. 27, 1901. 

Owen. VII. Susan^Owen, b., 1808; d. Oct. 24, 1883; m. 

William Henderson Allen, b., 1800; d., 1846. Issue: 

Allen. i. Lucy Owen% b., 1833 ; d., 1889 ; m. John Hugh 

Lovelace. Issue : 
Lovelace. (i) Martha^, in. H. C. Fairbanks, (ii) Anna^. 
(iii) Bettie Peck^ 
Allen. ii. James William^ ; Banker ; b. Feb. 29, 1836. 
iii. Martha Ann^^, b., 1839; m. Z. F. Offutt. 
Issue: (i) Susan A*^. 

iv. David Hugh^, b. Jan. 14, 1841; m. Mary 
Waters. Issue: (i) Stephenson Waters®, b. 

Oct. 24, 1869; d. . (ii) Amy Leonard®, b. 

Aug. 27, 1871. (iii) Foree®, b. Jan. 3, 1876. 
(iv) David Hugh®, b. Aug. 10, 1882. (v) 
Samuel Waters^ b. Mav 31, 1885. 
(vi) Sarah Gathrite®, Jb. Jan. 31, 1891. 

Elizaheth'^Oiven, m. Daniel Brannin, (p. 338). 

Issue: 

Brannin. j Abraham Owen^ Brannin, b.. New Castle, Ky., 
• Nov. 19, 1819; m. 1st., Nov. 19, 1840, Sarah Ann 
Roberts, b.. New Castle, Ky., Jan. 20, 1821 ; d., New 
Castle, Ky., Dec. 14, 1841; (Daughter of James 
Roberts who married Elizabeth Wilkerson) ; m. 2d., 
Mar. 12, 1843, Elizabeth Ann Roberts (sister of the 
first wife), b.. New Castle, Ky., May 20, 1823; d., 
Louisville, Ky., Jan. 21, 1900. Issue by 1st m : 
i. James Roberts®, b.. New Castle, Ky., Aug. 9, 
1841; d., Nashville, Tenn., Mar. 3, 1865. 
Issue by 2d. m : 

ii. Elizabeth®, b.. New Castle, Ky., Jan. 16, 
1844; m., Louisville, Ky., Apr. 3, 1866, John 
Hay Brand, of Lexington, Ky. ; ( Son of George 
Washington Brand who married Nannie Grif- 
fith, of Natchez, Miss) ; b. Oct. 6, 1841. Issue: 
Brand. (i) Daughter^, b, and d. Mar. 28, 1868. (ii) 



340 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. II I. 
Brand. 



Brannin. 



Sherley. 

Mc- 
Donald. 

Sherley. 



EUzahcth^Owen, m. Daniel Brannin, (p. 338), 
Issue — Continued : 

George Washington^, b. Sept. 28, 1869 ; d. July 
15, 1875. (iii) Laura Sherley^ b. Jan. 8, 1871 ; 
m., Louisville, Ky., Apr. 22, 1896, Rev. George 
Frederick Clover, of New York City, (iv) 
Abraham Owen^, b. Aug. 2, 1872. (v) Eliza- 
beth Hay^ b. Aug. 3, 1880. 
iii. Laura®, b.. New Castle, Ky., Apr. 15, 1846; 
d. June 21, 1872; m., Louisville, Ky., Oct. 9, 
1864, Lewis A. Sherley, b. Oct. 6, 1839 ; ( Son of 
Zacharias Sherley, who married Nannie Tar- 
ascan). Issue: 
(i) Brannin Combs^ b. Oct. 28, 1865; m., Dec. 
2, 1886, Brite McDonald, of Louisville, Ky. 
Issue: 1. Elizabeth Sherley*. 
(ii) Bettie Brannin^ b. Nov. 17, 1868; m., 
Louisville, Ky., Nov. 11, 1890, George Wash- 
ington Ewing, of Fort Wayne, Inda. Issue : 1. 
Geo. Washington*, b. Oct. 1891. 2. Lewis 
Root^ 
iv. Owen M®., b., Louisville, Ky., May 12, 1848; 
d. May 12, 1850. v. Owen Edwin% b., Louis- 
ville, Ky., May 12, 1850; d. Jan. 2, 1851. 
vi. Alice Barbee®, b., Louisville, Ky., Dec. 8, 
1852; m., Louisville, Ky., Nov. 2, 1875, Thomas 
Gould Gaylard, of Cincinnati, O., b., 1827; 
( Son of Thos. Gould Gaylard who married An- 
gelina Morrell). Issue: (i) Elsie Kilgour^ b. 
Aug. 13, 1877. 
(ii) Thomas Gould^ b. Dec. 18, 1880. (iii) 

Edith Pomeroy^ b. May 1, 1884 ; d. . 

Brannin, vii. Martha Ann*^, b., Louisville, Ky., Oct. 5, 
1856; m. 1st., Jan. 13, 1880, Thomas Zimmer-» 
man, of Cincinnati, O.; m. 2d., Apr. 22, 1897, 
Wm. H. Campbell, of Cincinnati, O. No issue. 
viii. Sophronia Summers®, b., Louisville, Ky., 
Sept. 19, 1861; d. May 6, 1889; m., Louisville, 
Ky., Nov. 2, 1885, Benjamin H. Ridgely. Issue : 
Ridgeiy. (i) Louise B^., b. June 26, 1887. 



Brannin. 



Gaylard. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 341 

Elizahetli^Oicen, m. Daniel Brannin, (p. 338). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap. III. II. John S^. Brannin, b., 1821; m. 1st, C. Craig. 

Brannin. Issue : i. DanieP, ii. Grosvenor^. m. 2d. Mary 
Craig. Issue : iii. Horace C^. iv. Miriam H*^., 
d., 1898. V. Mary% m. W. H. Trask, of Denver 
Colo. vi. Edwin S^. 

III. James W^ Brannin, b., 1822; d., 1866, from 
the effects of an explosion of a boat in the Missis- 
sippi river ; m. Martha Koberts. Issue : i. DanieP, 

m. ■ Pryon. ii. Bettie^. iii. Clark®, iv. 

Miriam*^. Last three died young. 

IV. Miriam'^Brannin, b., 1824; d.j 1853; m. Isaac 
Hiiiiard. H. Hilliard. Issue: i. Isaac Henry*^, m. Caroline 

Polk, of Maury Co., Tenn. ii. Edwin S®. iii. 
Mary Hardeman®, d. young. 
Brannin. ^- Clarke L^. Brannin, b., 1826; d., 1837. 

VI. Agnes^Brannin, b. and d., 1828. 

VII. Sophronia^Brannin, b., Nov. 29, 1830; d., 
1900; m. Edwin Harrison Summers^ b. Sept. 20, 
1827; (Served in C. S. A., under Gens. Beauregard, 
Bragg, and Sidney Johnston; Lived in New 
Orleans, La., and Pass Christian, Miss. During the 
War, Mrs. Summers had some thrilling experiences 
with the Federal Soldiers, who raided and plun- 
dered her home, taking away her valuables. She bore 
through the Federal lines valuable papers to the 
Confederate Authorities at Pass Christian). Issue: 

Summers. i- Miriam Brannin®, b. Mar. 27, 1857; m. Sept. 

20, 1876, William R Bechley. Issue: 
Bekie (^) Jo^^ Robinson^ b. Oct. 28, 1877. (ii) 

^' Edwin S^., b. Jan. 14, 1879. (iii) Cheatham^ 
b. Julv 28, 1882. 
ii. Daniel Brannin®, b. Sept. 29, 1858. 
iii. Elizabetli Roberts^, b. June 29, 1862; m., 
Feb. 14, 1882, John Middletou. b. Mar. 15, 1842. 
Issue : 
Middle- (i) Charles Gibson^ b. Feb. 22, 1883. (ii) 

Arthur Hagen', b. Nov. 22, 1886. 
(iii) John Summers'^, b. July 5, 1891. 



Summers. 



ton. 



342 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Elizabeth^Owen, m. Daniel Brannin, (p. 338). 
Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. iv. Alice Brannin*^, b. Apr. 7, 1864 ; d. June 7, 
Sum- 1890 ; m., Mar. 21, 1888, Hal. Byram. 

™^"- V. Margaret H^, b. July 9, 1866. vi. Eugenia^, 
b. July 18, 1869. 
Brannin. VIII. Webster^Brannin, b., 1831 ; d., 1832. 
IX. Elizabeth W^ Brannin, b. and d., 1833. 

Joseph^ Dupuy, m. Nancy Peay, (p. 337). Issue: 

Dupuy. I. Bartholomew'^Dupuy, b. June 15, 1799 ; d. Apr. 
26, 1832. 

II. Martha Turner^Dupuy, b. Aug. 25, 1800; d. 
Nov. 17, 1828 ; m. Nov. 29, 1821, Edward Branham; 
d. May 27, 1829. Issue : 
Branham. i. Thomas Bartholomew^, b. Apr. 15, 1823; d. 
May 12, 1856. ii. Joseph Simeon^, b. Dec. 31, 
1826 ; d. Aug. 6, 1850. 
Dupuy. III. Judith Coleman^Dupuy, b. Mar. 12, 1802 ; d. 
Apr. 20, 1894 ; m., Apr. 18, 1822, Edward C. Drane, 
M. D., b., Frederick, Md., Sept. 27, 1794; d., Louis- 
ville, Ky., Dec. 20, 1853; (Many years a prominent 

Physician of New Castle, Ky. ) Page, 345 

IV. Eliza Ann^Dupuy, b. Jan. 31, 1804 ; d. Mar. 
8, 1830; m., Dec. 3, 1823, Morton Brinker; d. Aug. 
25, 1829. Issue : 
Brinker. i. Mary Coleman^, b. Aug. 30, 1824; d. Aug. 23, 
1854; m., Feb. 8, 1848, William S. Pry on; (Cir- 
cuit Judge, and 26 yrs. Chief Justice of the Ap- 
pellate court of Kentucky). Issue: 
Pryon. (i) Joanna^, b. Dec. 25, 1848; m., Dec. 19, 

Castle- 1867, David R. Castleman. Issue: 

man. 1. William Pryon^, b. May 10, 1870 ; m., Lon- 

don, Eng., June 10, 1896, Aneta Belle Crellin. 

2. Samuel Torbitt^ b. Mar. 15, 1877. 

3. James^ b. Feb. 11, 1880 ; Volunteer in the 
Spanish- American War, June 8, 1898; quali- 
fied June 11, as gunner of Battery G., 6th 
Light Artillery; Served in several engage- 
ments in Iloilo, Philippine Islands; Dis- 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 343 

Joseph^Dupuy, m. 'Nancy Peay^ (p. 337). Issue 

— Continued: 

C hap. III . charged at Iloilo, Aug. 22, 1899, to take a 

Castle- civic position under the government, 

man. 4. David Rawson^, b. Jan. 26, 1882. 5. Laura^, 

b. Jan. 12, 1884; d. in infancy. 
Pryon. ii- Samuel Morton^, b. Sept. 9, 1853. 
Dupuy. V. Mildred D*. Dupuy, b. June 4, 1806; d. Aug., 
1883 ; m., Mar. 23, 1826, Zachariah Smith; d. Aug. 
16, 1826; (Son of Capt. Jesse Smith, m., in Vir- 
ginia, 1796, Joanna Pendleton ; They moved to Ken- 
tucky and settled in what is now Boyle County.) 
Issue : 
Smith. i. Zackary Frederick^ ; Bacon College, Harrods- 
burg, Ky. ; President of Henry College, New 
Castle, Ky., 1863-66, Elected State Superintend- 
ent of Public Schools, 1867, on the Democratic 
Ticket, and during his incumbency gave the 
Schools a great impetus by having the revenues 
increased to three-quarters of a million dollars, 
and laid the foundation for a splendid system. 
Located in Louisville, Ky., 1884; Author, 1886, 
of "History of Kentucky," for the library, which 
passed through three editions, and in 1889, pub- 
lished "The School History of Kentucky," which 
was endorsed by the State Board of Education, 
as a suitable text-book for the schools, and 
adopted by all the County boards, and by most 
of the city and town boards ; Elder in the Chris- 
tian Church for 50 years ; One of three to found 
"The Kentucky Christian Education Society," 
of which he was President for 12 years; Forty 
two years Curator of the Kentucky University; 
b., at the home of his maternal Grandparents, 
Henry Co., Ky., Jan 7, 1827; m. 1st., Jan. 7, 
1852," Susan Helm; d. Dec. 1, 1879; (Daughter 
of William S. Holm, Shelby Co., Ky., who mar- 
ried Rebecca Hinton) ; m. 2d., June 5, 1890, 
Anna Asa^Pittman, of Louisville, Ky., (p. 306), 



344 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Chap. ni. 

Smith. 



Joseplv'Dupmj, m. Nancy Peay, (p. 337). Issue 

— Continued: 

Issue by 1st. m : 
(i) Mildred*', b. Nov. 24, 1853 ; d. Oct. 16, 1854. 
(ii) Zackary Fred^, b. Aug. 16, 1856; d. June 
2, 1885. (iii) Joseph Helm«, b. Aug. 15, 1858; 
d. Dec. 5, 1890. (iv) Winthrop Hopkins^ b. 
May 3, 1860; d. Nov. 5, 1891. (v) Austin Du- 
puy% M. D., b. Apr. 16, 1862; m., Apr. 12, 1899, 
Maud Troxell, of Louisville, Ky. Issue : 
1. Mildred Helm^ b. Dec. 29, 1901. 
(vi) William Helm% b. Aug. 13, 1864; d. Nov. 
6, 1900; m., Feb. 3, 1892, Lillian Burgess, of 
Fort Worth, Tex. Issue : 
1. Susan Helm% b., 1893. 2. Zack. Burgess^ 
b., 1898. 3. Annie Duke^ b. Jan. 1901. 
(vii) Susan Viola% b. Jan. 24, 1868; m., June 
14, 1888, Wm. Hume Logan. Issue : 
Logan. 1. Robt. Smith% b. Apr. 6, 1889. 2. Edward 
Carter^ b. June 7, 1892. 3. Eva Viola^ b. 
Nov. 18, 1893. 4. W. Hume^ b. May 12, 1898. 
5. Son^ b. Nov. 28, 1900. 
(viii) Virgil Drane% b. Aug. 21, 1870; m., 
Nov. 18, 1896, Mana Lackey, of Bloomington, 
111. Issud: 
1. Charles Parked b. Feb. 15, 1899. 
Dupuy. VI. Augustine^Dupuy; An ardent Unionist in 
Kentucky during the Civil War.; Moved, 1868, to 
Texas, and organized, in 1870, the Republican 
Party of Jackson Co., Tex., of which he was chair- 
man; Treasurer of said county 1874-78; b., Henry 
Co., Ky., June 9, 1808; d., Jackson, Co., Tex., Sept. 
8, 1879; m., Feb. 5, 1833, Lucy Jane Thomas, of 
New Castle, Ky., b. Sept. 9, 1810; (Mrs. 
Dupuy, who furnished most of the register of 
this immediate line of decendants, writes Jan. 12, 
1904, "My health is comparatively good for one of 
93 years. The Lord has blessed me in many ways.") 
. . ; Page, 346 



Smith. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 345 

Joseph^Bupuy, m. Nancy Peay, (p. 337). Issue 

— Continued: 

C hap. II I. VII. Mary Mottlej^Dupiiy, b. June 4, 1811; d. 
Dupuy. May 5, 1829. 

VIII. Joseph Perry^Dupuy, b. June 13, 1814; 
Emigrated from Kentucky to Jackson C^. Tex., in 
1849, where he died on his ranch, "Red Bluff," July 
20, 1869. 

IX. James^Dupuy ; d. in infancy. 

Judith G^. Dupuy, m. Edicard C. Drmie, (p. 3Jf2). 

Issue: 

Drane. I. Joseph Stephen^Drane, M. D. ; Medical Uni- 
versity of Louisville, Ky. ; Chief Surgeon of the 6th. 
Eegiment of Kentucky Infantry Volunteers, U. S. 
A., during the Civil War; Mustered in, Dec. 24, 
1861, muster out, Jan. 2, 1865, Walter C. Whitaker, 
Col.; After the war, practised Medicine in Henry 
Co., Ky., until his death; "The Joseph S. Drane, G. 
A. R. Post, No. 124," New Castle, Ky., was named 
for him ; b. Jan. 13, 1823 ; d. Mar. 22, i869 ; m., 1849, 
Martha Amelia Gill; d. Sept. 19, 1850. 

IL Agnes^ Drane, b. Apr. 18, 1825; d. Nov. 11, 
1894; m., 1847, Richard Clough Anderson Logan. 
Logan. Issue: i. Martha Coleman^ b. Nov. 13, 1852. . ■ -//r 
Drane. HI. George Canning'^Drane; Hanover College, 
Ind. ; Law Course at the University of Louisville, 
Ky.; Judge of the 11th. Judicial District, Ky., 
about 14 yrs. ; After retiring from the bench, prac- 
tised law in his old district, and in the Appellate 
and U. S. Courts at Frankfort, Ky. ; b. June 17, 
1827; d., Frankfort, Ky., Jan. 1, 1898; m., Jan., 
1861, Mary Shipraan ; ( Sister of Paul R., Editor of 
"Courier Journal"). Issue: 

i. Paul Shipman^, b. Jan. 13, 1863; Formerly, 
Editor of the "New York Sun;" Now on the 
Staff of "The New York Herald." 
ii. Judith Coleman*', b. Oct., 1868; m., June, 
1895, Virgil Hewitt; d. July 4, 1898. ^'^^ 

iii. Edward Crabb", b. Feb., 1871. **t->^ 



346 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Judith 0*. Dupuy, m. Edward C. Drane, (p. 342). 
Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II L iv. Louise Shipman*', b. Nov., 1873 ; m., Apr. 11, 

Drane. 1898, Car Vattel VanAnda; (Assistant Manag- 

Van- ing Editor of "The New York Sun"). Issue: 

Anda. (i) Paul Drane^, b. Mar. 30, 1899. 

Drane. IV. Martha^ Drane, b. Nov. 4, 1828; d. Mar. 4, 

1883; m., Apr., 1851. Wade F. Lane, of Louisville, 

Ky. 

V. Edward Morton^Drane, b. Nov. 8, 1830; m., 
Mar., 1855, Alice Keats, of Louisville, Ky. ; (Daugh- 
ter of George and niece of John Keats, the English 
poet). Issue: 

i. Adele^, b. Mar., 1856. ii. Clarence^, b. Aug., , 
1857. iii. George Keats^, b. Jan., 1861. [ i^^ 

iv. Agnes Alice^, b. June, 1866. J ''^ 

Augustine^Dupuy , m. Lucy J. Thomas, (p. 344)' 

Issue: 
Dupuy. I. Mary Elizabeth^ Dupuy, b. Dec. 31, 1834; d., 
"Cedar Croft," Travis Co., Tex., Jan. 20, 1894; m., 
Sept. 27, 1863, J. Thomas Brackenridge ; Major of 
Texas Cavalry, C. S. A. ; President of Bank, Austin, 
Tex). No issue. 

II. Joseph^Dupuy, M, D. ; Medical University of 
Louisville, Ky., Mar., 1861; Enrolled in Company 
K. 6th. Kentucky Infantry, Walter C. Whitaker, 
Col., U. S. A., Oct. 14, 1861 ; Mustered out, Nash- 
ville, Tenn., Nov. 2, 1864; Reenlisted in the 4th. 
Kentucky Mounted Infantry, and mustered out, 
Nashville, Tenn., Jan. 2, 1865; Participated in 
battles from Shiloh to Altoona Mountains ; b. Dec. 
23, 1836; d., Owen Co., Ky., Nov. 22, 1897, where he 
lived and practised Medicine; m.. May 12, 1869, 
Isabel Suter. Issue: 

i. Helm Bruce^, b. Apr. 14, 1870; m., Dec. 20, 
1888, Francis Henry Senior. Issue : 
Senior. (j) Joseph David^ b. Nov. 17, 1889. (ii) 

Martha Belle*^, b. June 7, 1892. 
Dupuy. ii. Lucy J^, b. Mar. 3, 1872 ; m., June 22, 1898, 
George Alex. Budd, M. D. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 347 

Augustine^Dupuy , m. Lucy J. Thomas, (p. 344)- 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . iii. Edmund Long*^, b. Aug. 18, 1880 ; Cashier of 
Dupuy. Bank. 

III. Bartholomew^ Dupuy; Surveyor and Asses- 
sor of Jackson Co., Tex., 1870-89, to which he moved 
from Ky., in 1861; b. May 20, 1839; d. Sept. 27, 
1889; m., Jan. 22, 1863, Flora M. White. Issue: 

i. Joseph Perry^, b. Aug. 3, 1866; d. Dee. 3, 
1881. ii. Rose% b. Apr. 8, 1869; m., Nov. 25, 
1890, Henry D. Chivers. Issue: (i) Eulalie'^, 
b., 1891. iii. Frances^ b. Dec. 26, 1874; m., 
Apr. 10, 1898, John Horace Willson. iv. Mar- 
garet Owen% b Nov. 8, 1876; m., Aug. 9, 1893, 
Frederick BuJilcr. Issue: 

Buhier. (i) Frederick Dupuy^, b. Apr. 30, 1894. (ii) 

Marguerite^ b. Oct. 6, 1896. 
(iii) Theodore B"^,, b. May 1, 1899. 

Dupuy. V. Bartholomew^, b. July 10, 1883 ; d. in infancy, 
vi. Flora M^, b. Aug. 8, 1885. 

IV. Frances Ann^ Dupuy, b. Dec. 18, 1841. 

V. Roland Thomas^ Dupuy; Treasurer and As- 
sessor of Jackson Co., Tex., for one term each; 
Chairman of the County Republican Committee, 
1878-80; b. Jan. 7, 1845; m., June 20, 1882, Flor- 
ence Isabella Horton ; They settled on Kiack Ranch, 
Kimble Co., Tex. 

VI. Lucy J^. Dupuy, b. Jan. 5, 1848 ; d. June 2, 
1892. 

VII. Augustine^ Dupuv, M. D. ; College of Medi- 
cine, Galveston, Tex., 1876; b. Feb. 9, 1850; d. July 
10, 1876. 

VIII. Perry^Dupuy, b. Jan. 4, 1853; d. Sept. 7, 
1871. 

Sallie^Dupuy, m. Poindexter Tliomasson, (p. 337). 
_, Issue: 

Thomas- 
son. I. John James^Thomasson, M. D., b. Jan. 4, 

1794; d., Trimble Co., Ky., May 11, 1882; m. 1st., 

Sarah E. Coleman; d. Nov. 22, 1852; m. 2d., Sept. 

22, 1853, Elizabeth B. Neighbor. Issue by 2d. m: 



348 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Sallie^Dupuy, m. Poindewter Tliomasson, (p. 337). 
Issue — Continued : 



C hap. II I. i. Joseph M 



Thomas- 
son. 



b. Mar. 22, 1856; d. May 3, 1887, 
unmarried, ii. William Poindexter^, b. Mar. 
13, 1858; m., Oct. 12, 1881, Nannie M. Abbott. 



•J 
iv 



b. Mar. 5, 1860; d. Feb. 15, 1890, 



Barrick- 
man. 



Thomas- 
son. 



Haydon. 
Felix. 



(1) 



Haydon. 



Thomas- 
son. 



Rodman. 

Thomas- 
son. 



iii. Mary R^ 

unmarried, iv. Sallie Dupuy^, b. Sept. 23, 1862; 
m., Jan. 13, 1886, Lewis Barrickman. Issue: 
(i) Una Beulah^ b. Feb. 14, 1887. (ii) Laura 
E«., b. Oct. 8, 1889; d. Nov. 12, 1894. (iii) Wil- 
liam C^, b. Feb. 11, 1891. (iv) Cecil B^, b. 
Nov. 7, 1895. 
II. Joseph^Thomasson, b. Feb. 17, 1796 ; d. Sept. 
22, 1854 ; m. Martha Bartlett, b. Mar. 27, 1803 ; d. 
Feb. 22, 1883. Issue : 

i. Mary Mottley^ b. May 29, 1823; m. Thomas 
S. Haydon, b., 1814; d., 1895. Issue: 

(i) Mattie% b. Nov. 21, 1842; d. ; m. Rev. 

WilUsLm Felix, (Baptist). Issue: 

1. Mary^, m. Hamilton Wright, Issue. 
MaryS. (2) Martha^. (3) George^ 

2. Jennie'^, m. Caldwell. Issue, several. 3. 
Josephine''^, m. Richard Cummings. 
4. Mattie^, m. William Bain. Issue: (1) 
Marian^. 

(ii) Joseph^, b. July 2Q, 1845; m. Lucy Sehon. 
Issue : 

1. Mattie Belief m. Sept. 10, 1900, Arthur 
Sherrell. Issue: (1) Arthur^. 

2. Joseph''^, m. . Issue one. 3. Thomas'^. 

4. Mary^. 

(iii) Thomas^, b. Feb. 8, 1858. 
ii. Martha^ b. Feb. 19, 1825; d., 1854; m. Col. 
Harvey Bucldey. Issue: (i) Reuben®, 
iii. Sarah Elizabeth^ b. Jan. 13, 1827; d., 1858; 
m., Thomas Rodman. Issue: 

(i) James'^. (ii) Martha"^, (iii) Hettie'^. 
iv. John% b. Feb. 7, 1829; d., 1854. v. Hen- 
rietta^, b. Dec. 14, 1830; d., 1893; m. James 
Rodman, M. D. Issue: 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 349 



Chap. III. 
Rodman. 



Thomas- 
son. 

Thomas. 



Earley. 
Thomas. 

Wag- 
goner. 

Thomas- 
son. 



Smith. 

Thomas- 
son. 



Rankin. 



Sallie^Dupuy, m. Poindewter Thoma^son, (p. SSI). 
Issue — Continued: 

(i) Mary^, m. Sien Sutherland. Issue: 1. 
Hallie^. 2. Mary'', (ii) Thomas*^, m. Jennie 
William, (iii) Hallie^ 
vi. Georgiane^, b. July 29, 1835; m., 1854, Wyatt 
J. Thomas; d., 1867. Issue: 
(i) John*^, b. Mar. 15, 1857; m. Lettie Cox. 
(ii) Sallied b. Nov. 20, 1859; d. Apr. 4, 1896; 
m. C. C. Earley; ( Superintendent of the Union 
Central Life Insurance Co., Kentucky Depart- 
ment, Louisville, Ky.) Issue: 
1. Charles^ b., 1883. 

(iii) Kate*% b. Jan. 14, 1865; m. Burns Wag- 
goner. Issue : 
1. Madella^, b. Jan. 1, 1891. 2. Bums% b. 
Dec. 18, 1897. 
vii. Joseph^, b. Aug. 22, 1837; d. ; m. Mar- 
tha Middleton. Issue : 
(i) Laura^ b., 1860; d., 1890; m. James C. 
McFerren. (ii) Hettie«, b., 1862. 
(iii) Emma'', b., 1864; m. William Jackson. 
Issue: 1. Evelyn CarrolF. 
(iv) Mary^, b., 1866; m. Samuel Oldham, M. 
D. Issue: 1. Martha W^. 2. Dorothy^ 
(v) Annie«, b., 1868; m., June 3, 1892, Win- 
field S. Smith, M. D., b. May 12, 1850. Issue: 
1. Annie Laurie''^, b., 1893. 2. Robert''^, b., 
1895. 
III. William Poindexter'*ThomasRon ; Lawyer; 
Twice elected to Congress from the district of 
Louisville, Ky.; b. Oct. 8, 1797; d. Doc. 29, 1882; 
m. Charlotte Leonard, b. Mar. 7, 1807; d. Mar. 8, 
1855. Issue : 

i. Sarah Dupuy^; m. Ran'kin; d. July 10, 

1869; (Judge of the Supreme Court of Iowa). 
Issue : 
(i) Mary®, m. John N. Irwin, (ii) William 
Thomasson®. (iii) Bertie®, (iv) John®. 



350 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. II I. 

Thomas- 
son. 
Love. 



Thomas- 
son. 



Gold- 
borough. 



Thomas- 
son. 



Sallie^Dupuy, m. Poindexter TJiomasson, (p. 337). 
Issue — Continued : 

ii. Mary^, m. James Love; (Judge of the Su- 
preme Court of Iowa) . Issue : 

(i) William Thomasson^^ ; Lawyer. (ii) 

Jesse*^. (iii) Mary% m. Eev. Frank Cooley. 

(iv) Henry^. 
iii. Charles Leonard^; Major of the Louisville 
Legion, and killed at battle of Chickamauga, 
Sept. 19, 1863. 

iv. Laura Helm^, b. Jan. 19, 1834; d. Dec. 30, 
1898; m., Mar. 2, 1858, J. Richard Goldborough. 
Issue : 

(i) Charlotte Leah^, b. Jan. 1, 1859; d. Dec. 

17, 1880. (ii) Anna Brice«, b. Mar. 12, 1860; 

d. May 15, 1870. (iii) Charles Nelson^ b. Jan. 

25, 1862; m. Ollie Morris. Issue: 
1. Willie^. 2. Richard^ 3. Mary Elizabeth^ 
4. Helen Louise^. 

(iv) Mary Cornelia^, b. Apr. 23, 1863. (v) 

Sallie Ranking b. Aug. 12, 1865; d. July 21, 

1866. (vi) W^illiam Thomasson*^, b. Jan. 7, 

1867; d. Aug. 13, 1887. (vii) Brice Martin^, 

b. May 25, 1868. (viii) Louise MagilP, b. 
'Sept. 26, 1870; d. July 19, 1873. (ix) Eliza 

Pettit«, b. Sept. 10, 1873; d. Aug. 22, 1875. 

(x) Nina Christine^ b. July 10, 1875. 
V. Anna Cornelia^, m. Waverly Smith, M. D. 
vi. Nelson^b., in Ky., Oct. 15, 1839 ; m., June 10, 
1873, Nina Norton. Issue: (i) Leonard^, (ii) 
Nelson^, (iii) Nannine®. 
vii. John J^., m. Christine P. Hill. Issue: (i) 

Helm^, m. Yates, (ii) Louise^. (iii) 

EtheP. 

IV. Joel^Thomasson, m. Mary Kelly. 

V. Nelson Bartholomew^Thomasson, b., 1808 ; d., 
Jan. 24, 1871 ; never married. 

VI. Elias^Thomasson, b. Jan. 20, 1810; d. Jan. 
11, 1886; m. Mary Kirby Sneed, b., 1809; d. 1851; 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 351 



Sallie^Dupuy, m. Poindexter Thomasson, (p. 337). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . ( Daughter of James Sneed). Issue: i. and ii. 
Thomas- Mary S^ and Elias D^, b. July 20, 1839 ; d. 

iii. Sarah Catherine^, b. Sept. 11, 1845 ; m. 1st., 
May 9, 1865, John Fry, b. June 20, 1837 ; d. Nov. 
17, 1870. Issue: (i) Mary Wirt^ b. May 23, 
1866; m. 2d., 1871, Henry Fry (her deceased 
husband's brother), b. Mar. 23, 1832. Issue: 
(ii) Edith«, b. May 3, 1877; m. Apr. 30, 1902, 
W. D. Gallager, of Ely, Minn. 

Rev, John^Dupuy, m. Elizabeth Minter, (p. 261). 

Issue: 



son. 



Fry, 



Dupuy. 
EUy. 



I. Martha^Dupuy, b. Jan. 29, 1775; m. Thomas 
EUy. Issue : 

i. Eev. George W*. ; Pastor of the Christian 
church, Lexington, Ky. ; m. 1st., E. Allen; m. 

2d., P. Holloway; m. 3d., Gist. Issue by 

2d. m: (i) Thomas^. 



Walker. 



Hancock. 

Walker. 

Harding. 

Wheeler. 

Bodeker. 



ii. Beverly*, (iii) Henry*, iv. Maria*, m. 

Cosby. V. Caroline*, m. Tucker. 

vi. Eliza*, m. 1st Long; m. 2d., M. D. 

Walker. Issue by 2d. m : 
(i) Patrick Henry% b., 1831; d., 1861. (ii) 
Thos. Beverly^ b., 1834; d. 1863; m., 1854, 
Nannie Burks; d. 1862. Issue: 

1. Chariest 2. Elizabeth^, m. 1877, John H. 
Hancock. Issue : 

(1) Nannie^. (2) Lewis^. (3) Norton^. 

(4) Walker^ (5) Elizabeth^ 
(iii) Ellen^ b., 1837; m., 1857, J. W. Wheeler. 
Issue: 1. Claudine Martin*^, b., 1857; ra., 1891, 
Edgar Temple Harding. Issue: (1) Ellen 
Temple^ b., 1892. 

2. Elly Brannin«, b., 1859; m., 1881, Edwin 
Broaddns /?0fZe/rer. Issue: 

(1) Edith Chester"^, b., 1886. (2) Louise 
Wheeler^ b., 1888. 



352 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 



Rev. Jolin"Dupuy, m. Elizaheth Minter, (p. 261). 
Issue — Continued : 

Chap.ni. 3. Hanson Walker^, b., 1861; m., 1885, Mary 

Wheeler. Coit. Issue : (1) Hanson Coit% b., 1885. 

(2) Benjamin Jackson^ b., 1887; d., 1890. 

(3) Mary Russeir, b., 1891. 

(4) Frances EUen^ b., 1893. (5) James 
W^., b., 1897. (6) Sidney Sea^ b., 1899. 

4. William Beverly", b., 1866. 
Walker. (iv) John Parker^ b., 1842 ; d., 1883. 

Dupuy. II. John^Dupuy, b. Feb. 3, 1777; d. Dec. 25, 1807, 
in the far West, circumstances unknown. 

III. SamuePDupuy; Sheriff of Shelby Co., Ky; 
b. Jan. 7, 1779; m. Mary Anne Fawcett, b. May 14, 
1785 Page 355 

IV. Elizabeth^Dupuy b. Sept. 4, 1780; d. June 
24, 1811 ; m. Samuel Rousee. Issue : 

Rousee. i- Merrett^ ; never married. 

ii. Rev. Samuel'* (Christian), m. Rebecca White- 
side. Issue : 

(i) Virginia^, m. Leeper. Issue: 1. 

Paul Dupuy^and others, 
iii. William^, m. Elizabeth Roberts. Issue: (i) 

Robert^, (ii) Mary^, m. Smith. Issue: 1. 

Western R". 

iv. J. Western^, m. America Watkins. No issue. 
V. Mar ia^, m. Louis Wesfeni. Issue: (i) John'', 
(ii) Roberta (iii) William^, (iv) Louis^ 

(v) Eliza^, (vi) Lucy Jane', 
vi. Eliza*, m. 1st. Lewis ; m. 2d., Wat- 
kins. Issue: (i) John^. 
vii. Mary*, m. Robert L. Owens. Issue: (i) 

John^ ; d. single. 

(ii) Elizabeth^, m. William Middleton, and 

moved to Mo. Issue : 

1. William"; d., 1903; m. Miss 
Issue: (1) Belle'. (2) Walter'. 
(4) Lillian'. 

2. Robert", m. Lizzie Owens (his cousin). No 
issue. 



Western. 
Rousee. 



Owens. 

Middle- 
ton. 



Baughman. 
(3) Mary'. 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 353 



Rev. John-Dupuy, m. Elizabeth Minter, (p. 261). 
Issue — Continued: 



C hap. IIL 

Middle- 
ton. 

Owens. 

Middle- 
ton. 



Owens. 



Boul- 
ware. 

Dupuy. 



Evans. 



Dupuy. 



3. Luella% m. John Simney. Issue: (1) 
John W.' (2) Robert H^ 4. Eva^ 

(iii) Lucy^, m, John Middleton, and moved to 
Mo. from Ky. Issue: 

1. Mary^, m. John Jeter. 2. John^, m. Miss 
Moultray. 3. America*^, m. John Moultray. 

4. Myrtie^, m. William Thornburgh. 5. Ho- 
ratio*', m. Emma Stone. 

6. William*^, m. Lizzie Sechriet. 
(iv) William^, m. Lueretia Bruce. Issue: 1. 
Florence^, m. C. W. Moss, of New Castle, Ky. 

2. Lizzie®, m. Robert Middleton (cousin) of 
Kansas Cty., Mo. 

(v) Rev. Robert^ (Christian), m. Cynthia J. 
Nash, of Shelby Co., Ky. Issue: 

1. George Hunt^, m. Mary Sandifer, of Henry 
Co., Ky; (He is Cashier of Citizen's Bank, 
Port Royal, Kv). Issue: (1) Minnie Lethia^. 
(2) Catherine^. (3) Quida"^. (4) Robert^. 

2. Alethia®, m. Sanford O. Boulware; (Cash- 
ier of the United Loan and Deposit Bank, 



Campbellsburg, Ky.). 
Ford'. 
V. Anna^Dupuy, b. Aug 



Issue: (1) Lemuel 



LS, 1782; 



Evans. Issue: 
dinand^. 
iv. Susan^. 



m. John 
i. Robt^. ii. Alexander^, iii. Fer- 



V. John*, m. 



Crosbv. Issue: 

(iii) William^, (iv) 



Aug. 



18, 1784. 



(i) Lillian^, (ii) Mary^ 
Aliee^. (v) Annie^. 

VI. Mary3( Polly) Dupuy, 
Never married, 

VII. Benjamin F^. Dupuy; Settled in Evansville, 
Ind., where he was Post Master; an ardent Demo- 
crat; b., near Versailles, Kv., Apr. 15, 1787; d. June 
12, 1852; m. Oct. 10, 1809,"^ Mary Greathouse Faw- 
sett, b. June 9, 1789 ; d. Apr. 29, 18C4. Issue : 

i. Julia Cecilia*, b. Apr. 1, 1811; d., Evansville, 
Ind., Nov. 10, 1863; m., July 22, 1840, Joseph 



354 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Rev. Johu^Dupuy, m. Elizabeth Minter, (p. 261). 
Issue — Continued : 
Chap. III. M. Caldwell; d. Aug. 24, 1873. Issue: 
Caidweu. (i) Mary Fawcett^ b. May 2, 1841; m., Jan. 
1, 1843, Henry M. Sweeter, (ii) Annie Mof- 
fatt^ b. Aug. 22, 1842. (iii) Jas. Mofeatt^ 
b. May 8, 1844. (iv) Augusta Aliee% b. 
Caldwell. Aug. 9, 1846. (v) Franklin Dupuy% b. July 
13, 1848; m., Nov. 17, 1881, Cornelia Carpen- 
ter. Issue: 1. Mary Sweeter^. 
Dupuy. ii. Mary Eliza*, b. Oct. 30, 1812; m., Feb. 2, 
1857, Rev. John Varick Dodge (brother-in-law). 
No issue. 

iii. Augusta Alice*, b. Oct. 21, 1814; d., Jack- 
sonville, Ind., Jan. 14, 1856; m., June 6, 1842, 
Rev. John Varick Dodge (his 1st. wife), of New 
York City; b. Oct. 14, 1815; (Yale College, B. 
A., 1835; Princeton Theological Seminary, 
1839 ; Ordained, 1839, by the Presbytery of New 
Brunswick ; Pastor of Evansville, Ind., 1839-50, 
of Jacksonville, 111., 4 years, of Canton, 111., 2 
years, of Wheeling, W. Va., 2 years ; Appointed 
by Abraham Lincoln Chaplain of Military Hos- 
pital; He was the Son of Henry S. Dodge, a 
prominent lawyer of New York City, who mar- 
ried Jane Dey Varick, daughter of Dr. John 
Varick, of New York City). Issue: 
Dodge. (i) Helen^, b. Apr. 3, 1843; m., Jan. 31, 1867, 

Charles Ames, b., 1841 ; d. Oct. 25, 1871. 
(ii) Alice^ b. Mar. 17, 1845; d. Apr. 16, 1853. 
(iii) Jane Varick^, b. Dec. 7, 1846. 
(iv) Henry A^, b. Dec. 28, 1848; d. July 14, 
1869. (v) Frank Dupuy^ b. Oct 17, 1854; d. 

Apr. 27, 

Dupuy. iv. Benjamin Rush*, b. Jan. 1, 1817; d. Dec. 17, 
1838. V. Joseph Fawcett^ b. Jan. 29, 1819 ; d. 
June 22, 182.5. 

VIII. Tabitha^Dupuy, b. Feb. 13, 1790; d. Oct. 1, 
1854 ; buried in Shelbyville, Ky. Never married, 

IX. Jeremiah Minter^Dupuy, b. May 1, 1792; d. 
Dec. 25, 1834 ; m. Mary Heifley. Issue : 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 355 

Rev. John^Dupuy, m. Elizabeth Minter, (p. 261). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap, in . i. Catherine^, ii. William^, iii. John^. iv. Fer- 
Dupuy. dinand*. v. Benjamin^, vi. Elizabeth*, vii. 
Joseph^. 

X. Jane^Dnpuy, b., Woodford Co., Ky., Feb. 22, 
1794 ; d. Jan. 21, 1872, and was buried in the Ceme- 
tery at Shelbyville, Ky., where 5 or 6 other graves 
are found, without tombstones, on the same lot. 

XI. Lucy^Dupuy, b. Oct. 25, 1796; m. Rev. Wil- 
liam Begg, (Christian). 

^amuel^Dupuy , m. Mary Anne Fawcett, (p. 352). 

Issue: 

I. Josephine^Dupuy. II. John^Dupuy. 

III. Joseph Fawcett^Dupuy, all died in infancy. 

IV. Elizabeth Minter^Dupuv; Compiled a "Du- 
puy Tree" in 1852; b. Oct. 8, 1807; Lived at Grand 
Lake, Ark.; d., Springfield, Mo., Sept. 21, 1897; m. 
A. G. Ratcliffe, of Lake Providence, La. 

V. SamuePDupuy; d., Laracca, Tex., en route to 
California, 1849, of Cholera. Never m. 

VI. Emily^Dupuy; d., Grand Lake, Ark. 

VII. Amanda^Dupuy; d. Dec, 1869; m. Aaron 
Goza; d. Mar., 1890; (a large cotton planter in 
Louisiana, and for 40 years Chairman of the Stat€ 
Levee Board). Issue: 

Goza. i. Samuel Dupuy^ ; Captain of Cavalry in C. S. 
A; d, 1870; m.,'l860, Mary Pickett, of Missis- 
sippi. Issue: (i) Pickett^, (ii) Aaron^. (iii) 
Eliza^. (iv) SamueP. 

ii. George W^.; Major in C. S. A.; d., 1874; m., 
1863, Annie Brown. Issue: (i) Geo. C^. 
iii. Mary^ ; d. Dec. 1869. iv. Emma^ m., 1873, 
John B. Henslee. 

V. Elizabeth^ m., 1895, I. J. Kimberlin. vi. 
Aaron^ ; d., 1860. vii. Louis^ ; d., 1859. 
viii. James^, m., 1882, Mollie Thelfort. Issue: 
(i) Anna«. (ii) Maude^ (iii) Fay«. (iv) 
Jamie^. (v) Henslee^. 



356 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Chap. III. 

Dupuy. 

Brauain. 



Craw- 
ford. 



Brarmin. 
Stevens. 
Brannin. 



Samuel^ Dupuy y m. Mary Anne Fawcett, (p. 352). 
Issue — Continued : 

VIII. Maria Louisa^Dupuy, b., 1814; d., 1889; 
m., Daniel Brannin (his 2d. m., p. 338). Issue: 
i. Webster^ b., 1836; d., 1862. ii. Ann^ b., 
1838. iii. Saml. Dupuy^ b., 1840. These 3 
never married. 

iv. Sallied b., 1843; d., 1879; 
John M. Crawford (Baptist). 

(i) Maria Louise*^; d., 1879. 

(iii) Belle^, m. George Fee. 

d., 1892. (v) Alberts (vi) Sallie*^ ; d., 1881. 
V. Ella^, b., 1845; m. Thomas B. Stevens (Eng- 
lishman). Issue: (i) Harry^. 

(ii) Louise^, m. Frank L. Peyton, (iii) 

Mary« ; d., 1895. (iv) MabeP. 



m., 1864, Rev. 
Issue : 

( ii ) Caroline". 

( iv ) Engine^ ; 



Crow. 

WorrelL 
Dupuy. 



vi. Elizabeth^, b., 1847. Never married. 

vii. Lewis Edward^ b., 1849 ; m., 1885, Kather- 

ine Bacon. Issue: (i) Edward B*'., b., 1886. 

(ii) Carle B«., b., 1890. (iii) Lewis^ b., 1892. 

(iv) Reetor«, b., 1895. (v) Daniel^ b., 1897. 
viii. Martha^ b., 1851; d., 1890; m. 1st., 1874, 
William C. Crow. Issue, (i) Brannin C^., b., 
1875. 

(ii) Wm. Edwin^ b., 1878; m. 2d., 1885, E. 

Worrell. Issue, (iii) Clarence^, b., 1886. 

(iv) Edward^ b. and d., 1888. 

IX. Lewis E dAvard^ Dupuy ; Soldier in the C. S. 
A.; b. Oct. 7, 1816; d. July 4, 1900, in the Confeder- 
ate Soldiers Home at Higginsville, Mo. Never mar- 
ried. 

X. Mary Anne^Dupuy, b., Shelbyville, Ky., July 
4, 1822; d., Springfield, Mo., Mar. i4, 1897; m. 1st., 
G. W. Goza; d. Jan., 1851; m. 2d., Nathan G. Gofe, 
M. D. ; d. Mar., 1863. Issue by 1st. m : i. Benjamin 



Goza. 



Goffe. 



1844 ;d., 1875. 
b. Dec, 1850; 



11. 
m. 



Franklin^, b., 
iii. Georgie^, 
Gofe. Issue: (i) Clara L^., b. Sept., 

(ii) Aaron Goza^, b. Dec, 1873. (iii) 

5?athan^ b. Oct., 1875. 



Louis D^, 
Charles Henry 

1872. 
Charles 



LINE OF JOHN JAMEgiDUPUY. 357 

SamuePDupmj, m. Mary Anne Fawcett, (p. 352). 
Issue — Continued : 
C hap. II I. Issue of M. A^ by 2d m : 
Goffe. iv. Anne%- d. in infancy, v. John McGaw^ b„ 
1854; d., 1859. ' 

Ti. Ora Dupuy^ b., 1856; m. G. Wilson Rack- 
ney; (City Clerk of Springfield, Mo.). Issue: 
Hackney. (i) Nancy«. (ii) William^ (iii) Lee«. (iv) 
Tlieodore^ (v) Lewis«. 
Goffe. yii. Louisiana^ b. and d., 1859. viii. Theo 

Nathan^, b., 1860: ix. Samuel Dupuy' b 
1861; d., 1864. ^ ' '' 

Rev. James^Dupuy, m. Anne Starke, (p. 261). 

Issue: 
Dupuy. I. Jane^Dupuy, b., Virginia, Sept. 30, 1777; d. 
Sept., 1803; m., Feb. 6, 1794, Joseph Field. No 
issue. 

II. Rev. Starke^Dupuy; Editor, 1812, of "The 
Kentucky Missionary and Theologian/' of Frank- 
fort, Ky., which was the first religious periodical 
published west of the Alleghanies; Compiler of 
^'Dupuy's Hymns," which attained great popularity 
m the Southern States, and especially in Ky., and 
Tenn. It was revised by him twice. More than 
100,000 copies were put in circulation, chiefly 
through the western and southern states. His last 
revision, a short while before his death, was issued 
m 22 large editions. Later in life he moved to 
Memphis, Tenn. After his death, Dupmfs Hymns 
was revised, corrected, and enlarged bv Rev. J. :\r. 
Peck (Baptist), who wrote: "Elder Starke Dupuy 
was a worthy, pious and devoted minister of the 
Gospol in Kentucky and Tennessee, for many years • 
much respected by the Baptist denomination, to 
which he belonged, and by Christians generally. 
Though not a learned man, yet he possessed an 
amiable and spiritual mind, and deliirhted much in 
singing devotional songs;" b., Nov., 1779; m. Anne 
Webber. Issue: i. and ii. Philip^and Austin^ 
Twins. ' 



358 GENEALOGY WITH BEIEF SKETCHES. 



Rev. James^Dupuy, m. Anne Starke, (p. 261). 
Issue — Continued : 



Chap. III. iii. Eliza*, m. 



Koss. iv. Starke*, m. 



Dupuy. Webber, v. Rhodes*, m. Mary Gwyank. 

vi. Eev. Whitefleld* ; For many years pastor of 
the Baptist church of Water Valley, Miss., 
where he died, Mar. 17, 1877, aged 56 yrs; m. 
Judith Wall. No issue. 

III. Susanna^Dupuy, b. Jan. 3, 1782; m. 

Richardson. Issue: i. Nathaniel*. 

IV. Sallie^Dupuy, b. Mar. 21, 1784; d. Sept. 6, 
1802; m., July 28, 1801, Samuel Waddy. No issue. 

V. James^Dupuy, b. Aug. 29, 1786 ; m. Max- 
well. Issue : 

i. Nathaniel B*., m. Bate. ii. Napoleon*. 

iii. Jane*, m. William Davidson, M. D. Issue: 
Davidson. (i) James^ ; d. young, (ii) William H^. d. 
Mar., 1865; m. Lidia Jane Griffin, b. July 15, 
1845. 

(iii) Henry H^. (iv) Nathan ieP. LemueP. 
Dupuy. VI. William^Dupuy, b. Mar. 15, 1789 ; m. Maria 
Newton. No issue. 

VII. Ebenezer^Dupuy, b. Sept. 16, 1791 ; m. 1st. 

Hickman ; m. 2d. Chinn. Issue by 1st. m : 

^ i. Albert*, b. July 9, 1827; d. Nov. 15, 1852: 
Issue by 2d. m : ii. James*, b. Mar., 18, 1838 ; 
d. Sept. 9, 1854. 

iii. Hulda Ohinn*, b. July 25, 1840; m., Jan. 20, 

1870, William Q. Harrison, of Missouri, b. June 

Harrison. 16, 1840. Issue: (i) Mary F. E^, b. June 29, 

1871; d. Sept. 1, 1872. (ii) John W^, b. Sept. 

1 1873 

(iii) siulda Evaline^, b. Nov. 20, 1875; m., 

Nov. 7, 1891, Michael Eamhy, of Fort Smith, 

Hamby. Ark. Issue : 1. Falcon Dupuy^, b. Mar. 4, 1893. 

2. Robert Lee% b. Sept. 19, 1894. 

3. Edith Inize% b. May 17, 1896. 4. Renick 
Dixon«, b. Apr. 11, 1898. 5. Mable Clair«, b. 
Jan. 22, 1901. 

Harrison. (iv) Minnie V^, b. Apr. 11, 1878; m., July 24, 



LINE OF JOHN JAMES^DUPUY. 359 



Rev. James^Dupuy, m. Anne Starke, (p. 261). 
Issue — Continued: 

C hap. nL 1896, Henry Boozier; d. Jan. 20, 1897. Issue: 

Boozier. 1. Henry% b. Sept. 11, 1897; M. V^, m. 2d., 

Mar. 25, 1899, Sam. Presley (deserted her) ; 

m. 3d. Aug. 8, 1903, Chas. Johnson. Issue: 

Johnson. 2. Henry Boozier*^. 3. Holly Eugene*^. 4. 

Huldah Isabelle®. 
Harrison. (v) Esther^ b. Jan. 11, 1880 ; d. Dec. 7, 1880. 
(vi) Emma^, b. Apr. 23, 1881; m., Oct. 7, 1899, 
Walter Herrington, of Indian Territory. Issue : 
1. Clifton W^., b. Sept. 19, 1902. 
Dupuy. iv. John^ b. Dec. 28, 1841. 

V. Mary Evaline^ b. Feb. 28, 1844 ; m., July 20, 
1869, Edwin Harrison, of Missouri. Issue: 
Harrison. (i) Lewis^, b. Apr. 20, 1870. (ii) Pinnie^, b. 
Mar. 29, 1873 ; m., Feb. 3, 1889, Elmer Clark. 
(iii) Edna^ b. Jan. 7, 1875; m., 1898, Walter 
Irvine, (iv) Julius^, b. Jan. 8, 1880. 
Dupuy. vi. Elizabeth H^., b. Feb. 12, 1846; m., 1869, 
Gale Dowis, of Missouri. 

VIII. Anne S^. Dupuy, b. May 14, 1793. 

IX. Lemuel Wyatt^Dupuy, b. Aug. 22, 1797; d., 
1867; m. 1st., 1830, Lucinda Ann Smith; m. 2d., 
1832, Mary Jane Stephenson. Issue by 1st. m : 

i. James Kobert^; Georgetown and Shelby Col- 
leges, Ky. ; Private Classical Schools of Ky. ; 
Law School of Lexington Ky. ; Graduate of the 
Law School of Danville, Ky., June, 1857; Lo- 
cated, fall of 1857, in St. Joseph, Mo. ; In 1859, 
returned to Shelbyville, Ky., and practised law 
with Gen. Whitaker; Elected, 1862, Prosecuting 
Attorney of the Fifth Judicial Circuit, and 
moved to Louisville; Two years member of the 
Louisville City Council; Elected, 1878, Judge 
of the Louisville City Court; Moved, 1884, to 
Los Angeles, Cal., and, 1886, became Assistant 
District Attorney, then, two years. District At- 
torney, and again Assistant District Attorney 



360 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Rev. James^Dupuy, m. Anne Starke, (p. 261). 
Issue — Continued: 

Chap. III. for one year ; b., in Ky., Aug. 4, 1831 ; m., Feb. 
Dupuy. 23, 1863, Florence Mary Low. Issue : 

(i) Andrew Low^ ; Architect; b. Dec. 11, 1864; 
m. Jessie Kinsey. Issue : 1. Fred. K^., b. Apr. 
12, 1897. (ii) Robert Gay^ b. Feb. 14, 1867; 
m., Dec. 6, 1898, Pearl Severance, (iii) Flor- 
ence Lucinda^, b. Apr. 8, 1869; m., June 6, 
1893, Wm. T. Johnston, of Louisville, Ky. ; d. 
Jan., 1900. Issue: 
Johnston. 1. Wm. Dupuy®, b. May 10, 1894. 2. Flor- 

ence L«., b. July 13, 1895. 3. Margaret Mary^ 
b. May 13, 189^8. 

Dupuy. X. Eliza Bomar^Dupuy, b. May, 1800; m. 

Shannon, M. D. ; Settled in Shawneetown, 111. 
Shannon. igg^,g. i Albert^, m. Sarah Jane Reddy. Issue: (i) 
Minnie^, m. J. R. Williams, (ii) Thomas^ 

LINE OF PHILIPPAMD.) LEVILAIN. 

Philippa^ Dupuy , m. John Levilain, (p. 119). Issue: 

Leviiain. I. Marye^Levilain, b. Oct. 2, 1731, (B. R. No. 13) ; 
IL Susanna^Levilain, b. May 28, 1733, (B. R. No. 
17); 

III. John^Levilain, b. Oct. 12, 1735, (B. R. No. 
21) ; All died infants. 

IV. Elizabeth^Levilain, b., King William Parish, 
Va., Nov. 28, 1737, (B. R. No. 25.); d., "Dover," 
Goochland Co., Va., Dec. 13, 1803; m., 1758, Rev. 
Matthew Woodson, b., 1731; d. about 1800. They 
settled the famous "Dover Farm," on James river, 
Goochland Co., Va., some 18 miles above Richmond; 
[Mr. Woodson was Chaplain of the 1st Regiment, 
from Fredericksburg, Va., in the army of the Revo- 
lution, under the immediate command of Gen. George 
Washington ; He was a Son of Stephen and Eliza- 
beth (Branch) Woodson; Son of John and Judith 
(Tarlton) Woodson; Son of Robert and Elizabeth 
(Ferris) Woodson; Son of Dr. John and Sarah 



LINE OF PHILIPPAMD.) LEVILAIN. 361 

PhUippa} Dupuy , m. John Levilain, (p. 119). Issue 

— Continued: 

C hap. II I. ( ) Woodson, who was a native of Dorsetshire, 

Levilain. Eng., and the Progenitor of the Woodson family in 
the United States, and who, as a Surgeon, with his 
wife, whom he married in Dorsetshire, emigrated to 
America, in 1619, in the ship "George ;" In 1623, he 
was listed as Surgeon of the "Flour De Hundred" 
colony in Virginia; In 1644, he was killed in sight 
of his house by Indians, who had called him out 
apparently to see the sick; After killing him, they 
then attacked his home, which was defended by his 
wife and a shoemaker, named Ligon; The door of 
the house was securely bolted, and during the at- 
tack, his two little sons, John and Robert, were 
thrust into the potato hole under the floor for pro- 
tection, (hence they were afterwards known as the 
"Potato-hole" Woodsons) ; Mrs. Woodson burned a 
feather bed in the fire place to suffocate and prevent 
those who sought entrance down the chimney, and 
loaded the guns so Ligon could keep up rapid and 
constant firing; Nine Indians were killed, and the 
rest sneaked away, possibly wounded. The gun 
which did the most effectual work is still possessed 
by a Woodson of Prince Edward Co. Va.] . .Below 

Elizaheth^Levilain, m. Rev. Matthew Woodson, 

above. Issue: 

Woodson. I. John Stephen^Woodson, m., Oct. 9, 1777, Nan- 
nie Woodson; [Dangliter of Col John and Dorothea 
(Randolph) Woodson; Son of Josiah and Mary 
(Royall) Woodson; Son of John and Judith (Tarl- 
ton) Woodson, etc. (p. 360)]. Issue: 

i. Warren^; An eminent lawyer and for many 
years a Judge; m. 1st., Elizabeth McClellan; m. 
2d. Amanda Dick, of Fredericksburg, Va. Issue 
by 1st. m : 
(i) Susan^, m. James Hugh^Moss, M. D., (p. 
368.) (ii) 01iva% m. Prof. Matthews, of Col- 
umbia, Mo. Issue : 



362 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Elizabeth^Levilain, m. Rev. Matthew Woodson, fp, 
361). Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. 1. Gertrude^ b. Feb., 1864. 2. Jessie^ b. Feb., 

Mat- 18Q7 ; m. Thilly. Issue: (1) Gertrude^, 

thews. jgg^g ^^ Warren* by 2d. m : 

Woodson. (iii) John A^., m. Mary Baker. Issue: 1. 
Warren^. 2. Lucy^. 3. James®, 
(iv) Mollie^ m. Elliott, M. D. (v) Em- 
ma^, m. Wm. Baker. Issue: 1. Stella®. 2. 
Eugene®. 

(vi) William^; d. . (vii) Fannie^, m. — 

Badger, of Montana. 
II. Elizabeth^Woodson ; d., "Dover," Goochland 
Co., Va., prior to 1804; m., Nov. 22, 1778, Josiah 
Woodson, of "Dover," Goochland Co., Va. ; [Major 
in the Revolution ; was at the siege of Yorktown and 
the surrender of Cornwallis ; Son of Col. John and 
Dorothea (Randolph) Woodson, etc. p. 360; In 
1804, he emigrated with his children to Maysville, 
Ky., where he died in 1817]. Issue: 

i. Mary*, m., 1801, James Wynne Moss, M. D., 
of Goochland Co., Va. ; [Son of Major Hugh and 
Jane (Ford, her 1st. marriage) Moss, of Gooch- 
land Co., Va., died 1779] ; They emigrated to 
Maysville, Ky., 1803, and prior to 1821, moved 

to Columbia, Mo Page, 365 

ii. Caroline Randolph*, b., "Dover," Goochland 
Co., Va. June 14, 1792; d., Columbia, Mo., Apr. 
28, 1879 ; m. Augustus Wilson. Issue : 
Wilson. (i) Nathaniel Warfield^, m. 1st., Miss Stone. 

Issue : 1. James® ; d. . 

2. Ann®, m. Calib ^fo?ie. Issue: (1) Josiah 
W^., m. Elvira Dozier. (2) Walter^. N. W^, 
m. 2d., Mary Burnham. Issue: 3. Thomson 
Burnham®. 4. Lou®, m. A. G, Wilkinson. 

Issue: (1) Mary^, m. . (2) George^, 

m. . (3) Lucile'^. 

Woodson. "i- Martha*, m. Henry Machir. Issue : 
Machir. (i) John^, m. Mary January, of Columbia, Mo. 

(ii) Maria^, m. Thomas A. January, of St. 



LINE OF PHILIPPAMD.) LEVILAIN. 363 

EUsaheth^Levilain, m. Rev. Matthew Woodson, (p. 
361). Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. Louis, Mo. Issue : 1. Maria^, m. Dorsey. 

January. 2. Mattie^, m. Dorsey. 3. Mollie^, m. 

J Simes Parker. Issue: (1) Margaret^. 
Wooason. iv. Sophia*, m. 1st. William Hickman, Page, 360 

m. 2d. Lamb Page, 370 

V. Elizabeth*; d. young. 

III. Philip^ Woodson, m. Sallie Woodson; 
[Daughter of Col. John and Dorothea (Randolph) 
Woodson, etc., p. 360] ; They settled in Woodford 
Co., Ky. Issue: 

i. Warren*, ii. Tarlton*. iii. Pollins*. 

IV. Mary^Woodson, m. Jesse Redd. V. Prances' 
Woodson, m. Robert Farrar. 

VI. Jacob^Woodson, m. Dolly Peers, Issue: i. 
Nancy*. 

ii. Virginia*, m. Isaac Chaplin. Issue: (i) 
Eliza Belle^, m. Anthony Levilain*Woodson (p. 
364). 

VII. DaniePWoodson,m. Nancy Garthrite. Issue: 
i. Marshall*. 

VIII. SamuePWoodson, m. Sarah Miller. Lived 
in Glasgow, Ky. Issue: 

i. William Fountain*, ii. John Levilain*. iii. 
Spottswood*. iv. Samuel*, m. Nancy Allen. 
Issue: (i) Sarah^ m. Orlean Bishop, (ii) 
Mary Ann^. (iii) SamueP, m. Rebecca Haw- 
thorne. Issue : 
1. Urey^; Lawyer and Staunch Democrat; 
Member of the National Democratic Com- 
mittee from Kentucky, 
(iv) Emeline', m. William Browning. 
V. Jane*, m. Samuel Baylis Earle. Issue: (i) 
Earle. Sarah^ m. Thomas Morgan, (ii) Samuel W^., 

m. L. Rice, (iii) John Baylis^, m. Katherine 
W'oolfork. Issue : 
1. Luella«. 2. Lucien«. 3. Kittie«. 4. Por- 
tia®. 5. Augusta®, 
(iv) Henry Oscar^, m. Miss Seay. (v) Mary 



364 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



EUsabeth^Levilain, m. Rev. Matthew Woodson, fp. 
S61). Issue — Continued: 

C hap. III . Jane^ (vi) Maria^, m. Wm. Irvin. Issue: 
irvin. 1- William^ 2. Lawrence^. 3. Lilj«, m. T. 

B. Davis 4. Mary^, m. Yost. 
Earie. (vii)Rev. Fontaine Richard^ 

Amanda Buchanan. Issue : 
Woodson^. 3. Eleanor*^, m. I. 
Issue: (1) John Earle". (2) 
ard^. 
4. Fontaine P^, m. Martha Moore. Issue: 

(1) JohnBaylis^. 
(viii) Caroline E^. 
Woodson. vi. Tabitha^, m. James Miller, vii. Matthew*. 



(C. P.), m. 

1. Clara«. 2. 
A. Richardson. 
Fontaine Rich- 



viii. Daniel*, 
ix. Elizabeth*. 



X. Maria*, xi. Sarah*. 



IX. Thomas^Woodson ; Heir of the "Dover 
Farm;" b., 1772; d., 1857-8, in Hart Co., Ky.; m., 
1794, Sarah Saunders; d. aged 85 yrs.; (Daughter 
of Jesse Saunders, who married Mary Levilain, 
daughter of Anthony Levilain who married Miss La 
Prade). They moved to Kentucky about 1805-6, 
and settled in Woodsonville. Issue : 

i. Robert Saunders*, b., 1796; d., 1837; m., Oct. 

20, 1819, Hulda Young Page, 371 



Wilt- 
berger. 

Woodson. 

Garvin. 



ii. Mary Levilain*, m 



Wiltherger. Issue 
Macy. (ii) Ann War- 
(iv) Catherine^. 



(i) Elizabeth^, m. 

ner. (iii) Egbert^. 

iii. Harriet*, b. Sinclare Garvin, of Kentucky. 
Issue : 

(i) William^, m. Fannie Marshall. Issue: 1. 
William^. 2. Sallie«. 
(ii) Porterfield^ m. .(iii) John^, m. 



(iv) James^, m. 



(v) SamueP, m. 



Woodson. 



(vi) Alice'', m. Emmit Munford. (vii) Belled 

iv. Thomas*, m. Clarkson of Kentucky. 

Issue: (i) William^, m. . (ii) Son^ 

V. Edwin W*. Never married. 

vi. Anthony Levilain*, m. Eliza Belle^ Chaplin 

(p. 363). Issue: 



LINE OF PHILIPPAHD.) LEVILAIN. 365 

Elizabeth^ Levilain, m. Rev. Matthew Woodson (p. 
361). Issue — Continued: 

C hap. III . (i) Alberts (ii) Isaac Thomas^; Lawyer in 

Woodson. Louisville, Ky. ; m. Clarkson. Issue five. 

(iii) Matthew^, m. . (iv) Walter^, m. 

. (v) Warren^, m. . (vi) Critten- 
den^, (vii) Mary Levilain^, m. Kev. Cowherd, 
(viii) Belled 
X. Jane^Woodson, m. William Gathrite. 
XL Tabitha^Woodson, m. John Brown. 

Mary^Woodson, m. Dr. James W. Moss, (p. 362). 

Issue: 

Moss. I. Elizabeth^Moss, b. Maysville, Ky., Mar. 16, 
1804 ; d., St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 8, 1873 ; m. 1st., 1821, 
Daniel Pinchback Wilcox, M. D. ; ( State Senator of 
Missouri; Son of Col. George Wilcox of Virginia, 
who married Elizabeth Pinchback of North Caro- 
lina) ; m. 2d., 1833, Gen. Wm. H. Ashley of Mis- 
souri, d. Mar. 26, 1838; m. 3d., Feb., 1853, Hon. 
John Jordan Crittenden, d. July 26, 1863; (At- 
torney General of the United States). She was a 
remarkable woman, and an ornament to the society 
of the National Capital, during her life in that city. 
Issue by 1st. m : 
Wilcox. i. Anna Maria®, b., Columbia, Mo., Mar. 16, 
1830; d., St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 21, 1873; m. Nov. 
5, 1850, Hon. Edward Carrington Cabell, b., 
Richmond, Va., Feb. 5, 1816 ; d., at the residence 
of his son, Ashley Cabell, St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 
28, 1896; (Lawyer, and practised in Tallahasse, 
Fla., which state he represented in the National 
Congress, 1847-53 ; In Jan. 1860, began practise 
of law in St. Louis, Mo., and through his influ- 
ence that state was admitted into the Confeder- 
acy by act of Congress, Nov. 28, 1861; Lieut- 
Colonel, in the army of Northern Virginia, C. 
S. A., and from 1862 to the close of the war was 
on the Staffs, respectively, of Gens. Price and 
Kirby Smith, in the Trans-Mississippi Depart- 



366 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Mary^Woodson, m. Dr. James W. Moss, (p. 362). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . ment; After the war, remained on his Missis- 
CabeiL sippi river plantation until 1867, when he moved 
to Eichmond, Va., and the next year to New 
York City, where he practised law until 1872, 
when he became one of a Syndicate, interested 
in Mexican Mines ; In 1874, he returned to prac- 
tise of law in St. Louis Mo.; Elected, 1878, to 
the Missouri Senate, and at the end of the term 
retired from public life). Issue: 
(i) William H^., b., Washington, D. C, Dec. 
29, 1852; d., 1889. Never married, 
(ii) Ashley^, b., Washington, D. C, Dec. 27, 
1853 ; Completed the B. L. course at Washing- 
ton and Lee University, 1873; Studied in 
Europe, 1873-75; Practised law in St. Louis, 
Mo., 1875-78; Many years, jury commissioner 
of the city, and President and Manager of the 
American School-Book Company; Resumed 
practise of law and has become prominent at 
the bar of St. Louis; m., Oct. 19, 1881, Marga- 
ret Hodges Stretch, b. July 4, 1861; [Daughter 
of Dr. Aaron and Frances (Gondey, daughter 
of Thomas Gondey, b. Aug. 21, 1795, in Ireland, 
came to America in 1818, d., Nashville, Tenn., 
June 27, 1863, m. Ann P. McCarton, daughter 
of Thomas McCarton, m. Judith Smith, daugh- 
ter of Reuben Smith, Son of Reuben, immigrant 
from England, who settled in Goochland Co., 
Va., and was an officer in the Revolution) 
Stretch, of Nashville, Tenn., who descended 
form Nathaniel Stretch, an emigrant to Amer- 
ica from Wales and settled in the State of New 
Jersevl . Issue i 
1. Seldons, b.,*1882; d., 1887. 2. Margaret^, 
b. May 20, 1888. 3. CarringtonS, b. Mar. 12, 
1893. 

(iii) Florida^, b., Tallahasse, Fla., Sept. 17, 
1857; d. Mar. 16, 1858. 



LINE OF PHILIPPA^D.) LEVILAIN. 367 



Chap. III. 
Cabell. 



Gray. 



Cabell. 



Wilcox. 



McKin- 
ley. 



Boyle. 



Mary '^Woodson, m. Dr. James W. Moss, (p. 362), 
Issue — Continued : 

(iv) Agnes Bell"; Twin; b., St. Louis, Mo., 
June 13, 1860; d. Nov. 10, I860. 
(v) Elizabeth Crittenden^; Twin; b. St. Louis, 
Mo., June 13, 1860; 

Recording Secretary of the Colonial Dames of 
Missouri, and Historian of the St. Louis Chap- 
ter of the Daughters of American Revolution; 
m. Apr. 20, 1881, Benjamin F. Gray, of St. 
Louis, Mo., b. Jan. 10, 1847 ; ( Real estate agent 
and broker, of St. Louis, Mo. ; Son of Benjamin 
F. Gray, of Annapolis, Md., and Mary Jenkins 
of Wales). Issue: 

1. CabelP, b., St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 10, 1882; 

m., St. Louis, Mo., June 1, 1904, Georgie A. 

Young. 2. Benjamin Franklin^, b. St. Louis, 

Mo., Aug. 28, 1883. 3. William Ashley^ b., 

St. Louis, Mo., Dec. 18, 1888. 4, WastelP, b. 

St. Louis, Mo., Feb. 2, 1893. 
(vi) John J. Crittenden'^, b., Washington, D. 
C, Jan. 10, 1863 ; d., N. Y. cty., Feb. 24, 1872. 
(vii) Mary Hope''', b., N. Y. cty., Jan. 25, 
1867. 
ii. Mary Moss^ ; d. Jan. 30, 1893 ; m. Andrew ilf c- 
Kinley, of St. Louis, Mo. ; ( Son of Chief Justice 
McKinley). Issue: 
(i) John'^. (ii) Julia'^ ; Both d. young, (iii) 
Ashley'^, m. Ella Shallcross. Issue: 

1. John^, m. Lucy Chadborne. Issue: (1) 
Ashley^ (2) Wm. Kennett^ 

2. Ashley®, m. Theresa Nauche. Issue: (1) 
Eleanor Wilcox^ (2) Mary Theresa^ 

3. Elizabeth®. 4. Andrew®, 
(iv) Elizabeth Armstead'^. 
(v) Anna^, m. St. John Boyle of Louisville, 
Kv. Issue: 

i. McKinley®. 2. Telford®. 3. St. John®. 4. 
Mary®. 5. Randolph®. 



368 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



Chap. III. 

McKin- 

ley. 
Filley. 
McKin- 

ley. 



Moss. 



Mary^Woodson, m. Dr. James W. Moss, (p. 362). 
Issue — Continued : 

(vi) Mary^, in. Oliver B. Filley, of St. Louis, 
Mo. Issue : 
1. Mary Elizabeths. 2. Oliver D^. 3. Nancy^. 
(vii) Crittenden^ m. Lucy Bent. Issue: 1. 
Silas^. 

(viii) Andrew^, m., June 28, 1899, Pauline 
Chapin. 

II. Woodson^Moss, M. D., m. Sarah Ann Rookey. 
Issue : 

i. Woodson^, d. young, ii. James®, an orator in 
Oakland, Cal. 

III. Oliver Perry^Moss, b. Sept. 26, 1813; d. 
June, 1881 ; m., Dec, 1837, Caroline M. Thornton. 

IV. Mary Jane^Moss, b., Maysville, Ky., June 24, 
1818; d., Columbia, Mo., Jan. 7, 1887; m., 1838, 
Judge Logan Hunter, b., 1806; d., 1880. Issue: 

Hunter. i. Elizabeth Ashley^, b., 1841; m. 1st., Barry 
Taylor; ( Son of Col. James and Susan L. [Bar- 
ry) Taylor; Son of Gen. James and Kiturah L. 
(Moss, sister of Dr. James W-. Moss) Taylor] ; 
m. 2d., Col. E. C. Moore. Issue by 1st. m : 
Taylor. ( i ) Logan Hunter'^, m. Rose McGavock. Issue : 

1. Elawsons. 2. Roberta 3. Hunter^. 4. 
Elizabeth^. 
Hunter. ii. James Moss^, b. Dec, 1847. Never married, 
iii. Thos. H^. iv. Logan^, Both d. young. 
V. Mary Moss®, b. Mar. 1, 1844; m., Apr. 10, 
1866, Henry Harrison McCune; [Son of John 
Shannon and Ruth Anne (Glasbv) McCune] ; b. 
July, 1837; d. Jan. 22, 1876. Issue: 
McCune. (i) Ruth"^, b. June 16, 1867; m. Curtis Bur- 

nam® Rollins (p. 370). 

(ii) Jennie Moss^ b. Sept. 3, 1870; d. Oct. 21, 

1895; m. Hamilton Bowman'^ Rollins, (p. 369). 

(iii) Elizabeth"^, (iv) Sallie'^ ; Both d. infants. 

Moss. V. James Hugh^Moss, M. D., m. Susan^Woodson 

(p. 361) Issue: 

i. Laura®, m. E. W. Stephens. Issue: (i) 



LINE OF PHILIPPAUD.) LEVILAIN. 3(j9 

Mary^Woodson, m. Dr. James W. Moss, (p. 362). 
Issue — Continued : 

C hap. III . Amelia^ d. . (ii) Son^ d. . (iii) 

Stephens. Susan', d. . (iv) Hugh^. (v) James", 

m., 1898, Martha Blauton; (Daughter of Prof. 
Joe. P. Blanton; Son of Joseph Bhmton, Cum- 
berland Co., Va.). (vi) Sidney^ (vii) Mary 
Moss^ ; All lived in Columbia, Mo. 
Moss. ii. Warren Woodson^, M. D. ; i^ssistant Dean of 
the University of Missouri; m., May, 1881, 
Sarah Anderson ; [Daughter of Thos. and Sarah 
(Prewitt) Anderson]. Issue: 
(i) Kuth"^. (ii) Oliver Perry '^. (iii) James 
Hugli^. (iv) Sarah''', 
iii. Mary^, m. McGehee Dandridge Hunter, 
iv. James Hugh*^. 



•&^ 



8ophia^^Yoodsol^, m. 1st., Wm. Hickman, (p. 363). 

Issue: 

Hickman. I. Laura'^Hickman, d. aged 20 years. 

II. Mary Elizabeth^Hickman, m. ^'idnej Rollins; 
Rollins. [Son of Robert and Sallie (Rhodes) Rollins]. 
Issue: i. James Hickman*^; Captain in the U. S. 
A.; m. Eulalie Bowman; (Daughter of Col. 
Bowman of U. S. A. ) Issue : 
(i) Hamilton Bowman"^, m. 1st., Nov., 1890, 
Jennie Moss'McCune (p. 386). Issue: 
1. Jennie McCune^ b. Aug. 9, 1891. 2. Ham- 
ilton Bowman^, b. Oct., 1891. 
3. James Hickman^, b. Jan .18, 1894 ; 
H. B". m. 2d., Mav, 1898, Mary Carson, 
(ii) Mary Hickman^ m., June' 26, 1889, John 
Leister i^rJioii, of IJ. S. Army. Issue: 
Sehon. 1. EulalieBowman^b. Jan.'4, 1891. 2. Leis- 

ter^, b., 1893. 
Rollins. (iii) James Hickman'^, (iv) Eulalie Bow- 

man '^. 
ii. George Bingham®, m. Margaret Clarkson, of 
Columbia, Mo., Issue: 



370 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 



C hap. II I. 
Rollins. 



Hock- 
aday. 



Rollins. 



Overall. 



Rollins. 

Gray. 

Rollins. 



Sophia^Woodson, m. 1st., Wm. Hickman, (p. 363). 
Issue — Continued: 

(i) Clarkson^ (ii) Frank Blair''^. (iii) James 
Sidney"^, (iv) Margaret.'^. 

iii. Laura Hickman^, m. Irvine O. Hockaday. 

Issue 
(i) Rollins Mills'^, (ii) Eulalie'^, m. Rev. 

•Frank Woodford Sneed, b., Sedalia, Mo.; 
(Westminster College, Mo., B. A., 1885; Me- 
Cormack Theological Seminary, Chicago, 111., 
1888 ; Licensed, by the Pby, of Lafayette, 1888 ; 
Pastor of Riverside, 111., 1888-92, of Columbia, 
Mo., 1892-95 ; D. D., 1895 ; Pastor of the First 
church of Minneapolis, Minn., 1895-97, of the 
Washington and Compton Ave. Church, St. 

Louis, Mo., 1897 ). 

(iii) Irvine O'^. (iv) Laura'^; d. an infant. 

iv. Sallie Rhodes^ ; d. . 

V. Curtis Burnam^, b. July 18, 1854; m., Nov. 

21, 1888, Ruth^McCune (p. 368). Issue: 
(i) Curtis Burnam^ b. Aug. 26, 1889. (ii) 
Ruth^, b. Jan. 6, 1891. 

vi. Frank Blair^, d. . vii. Mary E. Hick- 
man^, m. Judge Jno. Henry Overall. Issue : 
(i) James Rollins'^; d. an infant, (ii) Flor- 
ence Rollins''^. (iii) John Henry^. (iv) Adele'^. 
(v) Sidney Rollins'^. These live in St. Louis, 
Mo. 

viii. Florence^, m. about, 1882, Rev. Joseph R. 

Gray, (Episcopalian) ; d., 1887. Issue: 
(i) Mary Rollins^ b. Jan. 14, 1885. (ii) Flor- 



ence Price"^, b. June 19, 1886. 
ix. Edward Tutt^ b. Apr. 10, 1860. x. 
d. young. 



Harry^ 



Bophia'^Woodson, m. 2d. Mr. Lamb (p. 363). Issue 

— Continued. 

Lamb. HL Josiah^Lamb. IV. SamuePLamb. V. Eliza- 
beth Ashley^Lamb, m. Clardy. 



LINE OF PHILIPPA^D.) LEVILAIN. 371 



Bassett. 



Shotwell. 
Bassett. ' 

Ardinger. 
Davis. 

Ardinger. 

Warin- 
ner. 



Robert S'^. Woodson, m. Hulda Young, (p. 364), 

Issue: 
C hap. II I. I. Jane Ann^ Woodson, b. Oct. 18, 1820; d., 1857; 
Woodson, m., June 14, 1837, John H. Ardinger, of Ky., b. Mar. 

5, 1816 ; d. Feb., 1899. Issue : 
Ardinger. i- Caroline Dupuy*^, b. Apr. 14, 1838; m., Feb. 
13, 1855, S. T. Bassett, M. D., of Mo., b., in Ky., 
May 30, 1827; d., Sept. 14, 1898; (The name, 
Bassett, is an ancient and honorable one on the 
pages of Virginia history; Among them, Mr. 
Burwell Bassett was, for a long time, Kepresen- 
tative of the Williamsburg district in the Amer- 
ican Congress, and often filled the Speaker's 
chair in the absence of that oflflcer, and was 
loved and esteemed for his integrity and friendly 
qualities. His name may be seen also on one or 
more of the earlier journals of the Church of 
Virginia, when it was first organized on the 
American platform). Issue: 
(i) Charles Horace^ b. Dec. 13, 1855; d., 1856. 
(ii) Margaret Jane^ b. Jan. 27, 1858; d., 1862. 
(iii) Eugene Stuart^ b. Oct. 7, 1860; d., 1862. 
(iv) Paul Ardinger^, b. Apr. 25, 1865; m., 
Sept. 1, 1902. 

(v) Maude Woodson^, b. Feb. 26, 1868; m., J. 
W. Rliotwell. Issue: 

1. Carrie^. 2. Warden^. 3. Philip^. 4. 
Katherine^. 
(vi) Mary Belief b. Oct. 25, 1870; m. E. R. 



Hamacher. (vii) Saml. Taylor'^, b. Feb. 7, 
1873. 

ii. Euginia Margaret^, b., 1841 ; m. Tilton Davis, 
of Mo. Issue: 

(i) Minnie"^, m. W. H. Robertson, (ii) Wood- 
son"^, (iii) Lee M^. (iv) John A"^. (v) Eu- 
ginia', m. Clifford Goodwin, (vi) Tilton'''. 

iii. Sarah Thomas®, b., 1843; m. H. 

?2er, ofTenn; (Lawyer). Issue: 
(i) Bodein"^, m. James Lee. Issue: 
(ii) Carrie'^, m. R. C. Mintfee. Issue; 
thy^. 2. Ardinger^. 3. Gussie^. 



C. Warin- 



1. SadieS. 
1. Doro- 



372 GENEALOGY WITH BRIEF SKETCHES. 

Robert ^^.Woodson, m. Hulda Young, (p. 36Jf). 
Issue — Continued: 

C hap. II I. (iii) Harry'^, m. Ellen Handy. Issue: 1. 

Warin- Daughter^, (iv) Gussie'. 

Ardinger ^^' ^^^^^^ Woodson^', b., 1845 ; m. Sallie Kirtly 
Rogers. Issue: 

(i) Eugene^, m. Thompson, (il) Horace'^ 

(iii) Bessie^, m. Nathan Adams. Issue: 1. 
Kirtley^ 
V. Hugh Little**, b., 1847; d. unmarried, vi. 
Mary Jane**, vii. Robert Oliver^ 
viii. Martha^, ix. Elizabeth^. Last 4 died young. 
Woodson. II- Philip^ Woodson ; d., Richmond, Mo., 1904 ; m. 
Hallie Jackson of Ky. 

III. Martha Anthony^Woodson, m. Austin A. 
King; (Governor of Missouri and grandson of John 
Sevier, who was the first governor of Tenn. ) Issue : 

i. Nannie^, d. young, ii. Mary Belle®, m. Harry 
M. Tootle, of St. Joseph, Mo., Issue: 
(i) Harry King"^. (ii) Lillian Ogden'^. (iii) 
Mary McCord'^. (iv) Austin'^, d. young. 

IV. Thomas Dupuy^Woodson ; Soldier in the 
Mexican War; Accumulated considerable wealth, 
and was prominent in civil and ecclesiastical af- 
fairs; The "Woodson Institute," Richmond, Mo., 
where he lived, was named in his honor; b., Ky., 
Mar. 10, 1828 ; d., Richmond, Mo., Aug. 28, 1902 ; m., 
Dec. 5, 1854, Sabina Linville Hughes, b., Ky., 1830; 
d., Richmond, Mo., Apr. 11, 1871. Issue: i. Lydia 

Anne6, b. Sept. 27, 1855. 

ii. Harry Philips, b. Mar. 23, 1859; m., Nov. 16, 
1881, Stella Gaultny of Miss., b. June 14, 1860. 
Issue : 
(i) Thomas Dupuy"^, b. Sept. 13, 1882. (ii) 
Jas. Robert^ b. Feb. 15, 1884. (iii) Clara 
Gaultnev^ b. Sept. 17, 1886. (iv) Harry Phil- 
ip^ b. Mar. 15, 1892. 
iii. Virginia Elizabeth^, b. Sept. 11, 1870; m., 
June 14, 1893, Robert Sevier, M. D., Practi- 
tioner of Richmond, Mo.; (Son of Charles and 



King. 

Tootle. 

Woodson, 



LINE OF PHILIPPAMD.) LEVILAIN. 373 



Robert S^. Woodson, m. Hulda Young, (p. 364). 
Issue — Con tinned : 

C hap. II I. Emma, daughter of Rev. Tyson Dines; Son of 
Sevier. Major Robert, of U. S. A., who descended from 
John Sevier, first governor of Tenn.). Issue: (i) 
Robert Woodson^. 
Woodson. V. Elizabeth Levilain^Woodson, m. Shelby An- 
drew Jackson, D. D., of Ky., Issue: 
Jackson. i. Harry Dupuy^, b. May 10, 1859 ; m. Sallie C. 
Brown. Issue : 
(i) Harry Dupuy''^. (ii) Shelby Sherwood^, 
(iii) Mary L'. (iv) John T^ (v) Babe^. 
ii. Shelby Sherwood^, b. June 1, 1860. iii, John 
Thomas^ b. June 20, 18(34. iv. Annie Eliza^ b. 
Aug. 17, 1868; m. Daniel Ferdinand Gihhs. 
Issue : 
Gibbs. (i) Ferdinand Jackson''', (ii) Mary Louise''^. 

Jackson. v. Harriet Elizabeth'', b. Dee. 3, 1870; m. Adol- 
phus Bascomb Kevil. Issue: (i) Elizabeth'''. 
Woodson. VI. Robert Hide"' Woodson ; Killed in the C. S. 
A., at the battle of Shiloh. 



374 CONTINUATION OF THE GENEALOGY. 



CONTINUATION OF THE GENEALOGY. 376 



376 CONTINUATION OF THE GENEALOGY. 



CHAPTER IV. 

THE HONORABLE POSTERITY, 

Pride of Ancestry Is Not Vanity. 

Each name in the Genealogy represents achap. iv. 
line of ancestors which stretches far back into 
the past, and of their numerous posterity it 
can be most truly affirmed that the noble 
characteristics of honesty, truth, virtue and 
piety have eminently predominated and 
adorned their lives. 

It is thought by some that pride of ancestry 
is the height of folly. But such persons gen- 
erally have no ancestors of whom they might 
be proud. Hence they are not revered. And 
when a man does not know who his grand- 
parents were, naturally enough he does not 
care what they were. But blood in man will 
tell as well as blood in horses. It is strange, 
that, when a man wishes to buy a horse, even 
a pig, or puppy, he will inquire into the breed- 
ing, yet, when a man and woman want to 
marry, the blood of the parties cuts no figure 
whatever. People are more careful now-a- 
days for the blood of the stock on their farms 
than they are for the blood in their homes. 
How strange! If high breeding, by the uner- 
ring laws of nature, ^Adll improve the blood of 
the lower animals, why should it not improve 
that of man also? The blood of the Hugue- 
nots will bear testimony on this subject. 

It is not foolish arrogance, therefore, to 
assert that the descendants of Bartholomew 
Dupuy have a pride of ancestry which is cher- 
ished, since it has come to them bv the natural 



378 THE HONORABLE POSTERITY. 

Chap. IV. law of descent. They know not only whence 
What they have come, but also both who and what. 

Owes to More noble blood never settled American soil 
the than that which circulated through the veins 
nots!" of the Huguenots, whose sterling worth helped 
to lay the firm corner stones of the great re- 
public and to establish the grand institutions 
of the land. Their influence in moulding the 
character of the American people has been out 
of all porportion to the extent of their immi- 
gration. The prominence of Huguenot names 
in the rolls of patriots, statesmen, lawyers, 
philanthropists, ministers of the Gospel, phy- 
sicians, editors, educators — men of note in 
every calling in the United States — is too no- 
ticeable and significant to allow the statement 
to be questioned. Moulded, as the Huguenots 
were, in the furnace of persecution, they taught 
their offspring to endure hardness, to develop 
the mental powers, and to build character on 
industry, truth, honesty, virtue and religious 
belief, from which they were not to swerve. 
These principles have clung to their descend- 
ants, in their dispersion over the country, and 
may be easih^ recognized in the living genera- 
tions from Bartholomew Dupuy. The land 
allotted to the Huguenots in King William's 
Dis- Parish held his descendants only so long as it 

^®^oJ°° met the requirements of their life. As their 

Descend- children and grand children grew up, other 
^°*^' and distant parts of the country enticed their 
industry, and they went forth to replenish the 
earth. They first settled homes in the coun- 
ties of Chestifield, Dinwiddle, Nottoway, 
Amelia, Goochland, Cumberland, Bucking- 
ham, Prince Edward, Charlotte, Pittsylvania, 
Franklin, Bedford, and Amherst; and near the 



DISPERSION. 379 

close of the 18tli century, they began to launch^h^Piiv. 
out to distant states, until now these descend- 
ants are dispersed throughout all the states, 
South and West, and many of them away up 
North. This is actual information gathered 
in compiling the genealogy. And it may be 
safely estimated that thousands of the old pro- 
genitor's descendants are not recorded in the 
genealogy. Many of them have actually lost 
their pedigree, and only know by tradition 
that they descended from him, while the ad- 
dresses of others who have preserved it were 
imknown to the author, or who take no inter- 
est in the subject. 

Those who were pioneers of the new country 
to which they emigrated endured great hard- 
ships in felling forests, building themselves 
homes, and accumulating estates ; and some of 
them passed through thrilling scenes with the 
Indians, which would fill an interesting vol- 
ume of fascinating adventures, and undaring 
bravery, if they were collated and published. 

None of the descendants have accumulated 
immense fortunes. They seem to have been 
content with a state of sufficiency, and to have 
been governed in their dealings with their 
fellow men by the spirit to live and to let live. 
The writer has never learned of a single lineal 
descendant, who by his own efforts became a 
millionaire. This is remarkable, when we 
think of their thousands and the opportuni- 
ties afforded to amass fortunes, while others 
around them did it. Doubtless it must be 
accounted for on the ground that they had not 
inherited a grasping spirit, but rather prin- 
ciples which forbade the love of mone3^ 



380 THE HONORABLE POSTERITY. 

C hap. I V. In every v^ar, in which the United States 
has been engaged, these descendants have 
taken an active part. Their inheritance of 
valour from their old progenitor, and the re- 
membrance of his patriotism and bravery, 
have always revived whenever the tocsin of 
war has been sounded, and they have ever 
been found in the forefront and thickest of 
Reyoiu- battles. In the war of the Revolution, as far 

*^^°°' as information can now be gathered almost 
every one who was eligible to arms, shoul- 
dered his musket and fought to liberate his 
country from British rule. The preservation 
of relics, cherished as heir-looms of that war, 
still found among the living descendants, tes- 
tifies of their patriotism and love to their 
Wars of country. In the war of 1812, many of them 

1846 T^esponded to the call for troops, and went far 
north to defend that border land; and in the 
Mexican War they went to the far South to 

Civil defend that border. In the great Civil War 

^^^" it certainly would be hard to find in the East, 
the name of a descendant, who was eligible 
at all to arms, who had not enlisted and taken 
an active part, until killed in battle, or the 
cause was lost to the South. Many of them 
enlisted while under age, and fought to the 
end, yielding at last with hearts of bitterness 
to the inevitable. As the overwhelming ma- 
jority of them resided in the South, they cast 
their lot with the Confederacy, and in losing 
their cause, many of them lost all of their 
available property, and in an impoverished 
condition had to begin life or business from 
the start. Then it was that those principles 
which had sustained the Huguenots in their 
severe ordeals revived to rescue them from 



DESCENDANTS IN AMERICAN WARS. 381 

their impoverished condition; and by energyc hap. iv . 
and frugal industry they soon found them- 
selves on rising ground again. Some of the 
descendants who lived in the West were on the 
Federal side. In these wars many of them 
held honorable positions, as officers in the 
ranks, on the staffs of Generals, and a few of 
them became generals of forces. 

In the late Spanish- American War, a liberal Spanish- 
number of the younger descendants volun-^'''^"^^" 
teered, and remained in the U. S. A., until 
they were honorably discharged with their 
commands; some of them reached Cuba and 
the Philippine Islands, and were engaged in 
battles. 

Like the Huguenots of France, the descend- 
ants of Bartholomew Dupuy have been com- sodai 
posed mostly of the better classes of society .^^^^^'''s. 
Wherever they have gone, they have main- 
tained the respect and esteem of the commun- 
ity in which they lived, and have moved in the 
upper grade of society. Great changes take 
place in a people in one century, but in the 
case of these descendants, more than three 
centuries have not availed to change the high 
and noble character, which from the first 
marked their ancestors. The explanation 
may be found both in their family govern- 
ment and in the principles which they have 
inherited. 

Education has been one of their chief char- Educa- 
acteristics. In many successive generations, tion. 
on different lines of descent, the men have 
been College bred, and the women have been 
educated at the ])est female schools of their 
day. All professions and avocations of life, — 
law, medicine, preaching, professorships and 



382 THE HONORABLE POSTERITY. 

C hap, iv .presidencies of Colleges, editing of secular and 
religious papers, and the writing of books of 
diversified literature, — have been followed. 
The two which certainly have predominated 

Medicine are medicine and law. In these two profes- 
La^. sions, there have been some able men in many 
lines of descent, and they have commanded 
large and lucrative practice in large cities, 
standing in the front of their professions. 
Others have graced legislative and senatorial 
halls, and still others have presided with dig- 
nity and ability on county, municipal, district, 
and State benches of Justice. All lines of 
Lines busiucss — banking, merchandise, manufac- 

Business.tures, mcchauics, commerce, farming, teach- 
ing, offices of county and state — have been 
followed and made a success by many of these 
descendants. 

Beginning with the grand children of Bar- 

Ministry.tholomew Dupuy, we have the Ministry of the 
Gospel represented, and every generation 
since has been adorned with that profession, 
in the various denominations. In the South- 
ern Presbyterian Church there are now six 
living ministers through the descent of Peter, 
and others in the Northern Church; while 
facts indicate that the Ministry in the Baptist 
and Christian denominations is far better rep- 
resented in the line of descent through John 
James. Martha and Philippa, the daughters, 
have also furnished their quota. 

The marked degree in which Protestantism 

Religion, has characterized these descendants is also 
worthy of note. After the lapse of 200 years, 
the writer, in his wide correspondence to 
gather data for the genealogy, has never 
learned of a single descendant who had been, 
or is a Roman Catholic ; while all the different 



AVOCATIONS AND RELIGION. 383 

Protestant denominations are most generallyc hap. iv . 
represented. In the pioneer days of the coun- 
try wherever they settled, they became active 
in building and maintaining churches, and 
wherever they now reside they are a church 
going and church supporting people. Among 
the descendants from Peter and Philippa the 
Presbyterian denomination seems to have Denomi- 
largely predominated. Among those from nations 
John James, the Baptist and Christian denom- sented. 
inations lead in the order named. The church 
relations of the descendants from Martha is 
not so well known, but many of them were, 
and are Presbyterians. It may be safely 
affirmed that the great majority of the de- 
scendants have been, and are still Calvinists. 

These facts may be gathered from the briof 
sketches given in the genealogy. It is not ia 
the province of a volume like this to enter into 
particulars, or to enlarge upon them. Suffice 
it to say, that it is very evident that what 
France lost, this country has greatly profited, 
in the immigration to it of the one Huguenot, 
Bartholomew Dupuy. Mortal mind cannot 
estimate the quiet influence for good, which 
has emanated from him and dispersed to all 
parts of the land. What a harvest it will 
make in the great gathering day! 

These facts are an heritage to the living 
descendants. History loves to trace the line- 
age of those whose lives have been heroic, 
honorable, industrious, virtuous and religious. 
And when such character descends from sire 
to son, 

"And is successively, from blood to blood. 
The right of birth/' 
the pride which it begets is shorn of its 
offence, and the bequeathed legacy becomes to 



384 THE HONOKABLE POSTERITY. 

C hap. IV . the succeeding heirs a spur and stimulus to 
preserve and perpetuate untarnished their 
noble inheritance. If the blood which coursed 
through the veins of a long line of descendants 
has borne upon its tide the virtues which first 
distinguished it, and the scions of an ancestor 
give presage of characteristics which made 
him honorable, mankind, which distinguishes 
with sagacity between a counterfeit and true 
aristocracy, will bow with deference to those 
traits which seal the legitimacy of their sway. 
The longest pedigree must have a beginning, 
and if there be any glory attached to it, that 
glory must be yielded to its progenitor, who 
chalked out the way for his descendants. 
Sweet waters never flow from bitter foun- 
tains. It is the impress of progenitors which 
distinguishes their offspring and helps to 
make them what they are. The glory of a 
family does help a man through life. Men 
believe in association. A Standley is honor- 
able because he is a Standley. The Spartan 
boys were brave, not simply because their 
nerves were stronger than others, but because 
they were Spartans, and had an hereditary 
virtue descending upon them from their 
^A?to-°* family. The old theory, therefore, that men at 
gether a birth are like a sheet of white paper is not 
ThS^ altogether true. They are like such a sheet 
at Birth. Written on with invisible ink, which the fire of 
circumstances makes visible, or develops a 
writing which they did not write. Who did 
write it? Their ancestors, running back 
through many generations. In other words, 
man comes into life as a seed which has in 
itself the effects of the foregoing conduct of a 
successive line of ancestors. He is not an 
original, new thing, the outcome of which is 



HERITAGE SHOULD BE CHERISHED. 385 

wholly determined by his own will. But there C hap. iv . 
are elements born in him, which are not 
wholly casual, and which relate to foundation 
of character and go to determine moral prin- 
ciples. If it be true that face, countenance, 
and bodily form are features, every one of 
which can be traced back to some ancestor, in 
whole or in part, the same is true also of moral 
character. We are thus spelled out of the past 
existence of ancestors, on whose shoulders we 
stand. This being true, the descendants of 
Bartholomew Dupuy should cherish, guard 
and try to perpetuate that good and honorable 
name, which has been bequeathed them 
through a long line of descent. 

Their ancestors laid the foundations of char- 
acter upon which they now stand, and are 
esteemed. The honorable name, *' Hugue- 
nots,^' was not won and earned by them, but 
was bequeathed them by their forefathers; 
and as heirs they have entered into possession 
of it, as sons of great warriors take possession 
of spoils won by the sword of their fathers. 
Should not the descendants cherish and guard 
that honorable name, as a pearl of great 
price ? How easy it is to injure it by sloth and 
sin, by intemperance and lust, by uncontrolled 
passions and neglect of mental and moral 
development! It takes years to build up an 
honorable name, and when it is inherited, 
boasted of, and yet not duly appreciated and 
guarded, it is often lost by one rash and 
ignoble act. 

"Boast not these titles of your ancestors, 
Brave youths; they're their possessions, none 

of yours. 
When your own virtues, equal'd have their 

names, 



386 THE HONORABLE POSTERITY. 

C hap. IV . 'Twill be but fair to lean upon their fames ; 

For they are strong supporters; but till then 

The greatest are but growing gentlemen ; 

It is a wretched thing to trust to reeds, 

Which all men do, that urge not their own deeds 

Up to their ancestors ; the river's side, 

By which you're planted, shows your fruit shall 

bide; 
Hang all your rooms with one large pedigree ; 
'Tis virtue alone is true nobility; 
Which virtue from your father, ripe, will fall ; 
Study illustrious him, and you have all." 

There is also the heritage of religion, which 
the descendants should cherish and endeavor 
to perpetuate. The heroic endeavours of the 
ancestors to maintain their religion, and the 
cruel persecutions which they endured there- 
for should be whispered from sire to son until 
their very sufferings are hallowed. Two 
centuries have carried their ancestors awav, 
Example but whatever of religious life they cherished, 
FoUowed.the same is the descendants' b}^ inlieritance. 
Were the ancestors given to repentance of sin? 
Let it awaken the descendants. Did the an- 
cestors bear tistimony to the grace which is in 
Christ alone ? Let it convert the descendants. 
Did the ancestors set forth an example of 
love? Let it mellow the descendants. Did the 
ancestors fight the good fight of faith? Let it 
animate the descendants in their conflict with 
sin. Did the ancestors persevere with pa- 
tience ? Let it enthuse the descendants. Was 
the hope of the ancestors unquenchable? Let 
it enliven the descendants. All the gifts and 
all the services of the ancestors have been 
bestowed for the benefit of the descendants, 
and are at their disposal. They are theirs as 
a part of the inheritance, which they are called 



HERITAGE SHOULD BE PERPETUATED. 387 

freely to enjoy. Their fathers before themc hap. iv . 
had a God, whom they loved, worshiped, and 
served before they were born. Shall they 
break the record and become renegades to the 
long line of faith's march? Who of the de- 
scendants can be content to break the glorious 
chain, and sever the great procession of reli- 
gious life, which for more than two hundred 
years has marched down the track of time in 
a pious ancestry? These ancestors have veri- 
fied the word of God; "One generation shall 
praise his works to another." How beautiful! 
Shall therefore the voice of the living descen- 
ants be silent, their thought idle, and their 
heart cold and dead to the God of their 
fathers? No. They will be influenced by the 
unfeigned faith of their ancestors, and not mar 
their good name by unbelief. We urge this as 
a special duty on the younger descendants, 
that they may not only experience the joy and 
freedom, which such a hallowed faith begets, 
but may also know what a noble heritage they 
have in their ancestry, who suffered exile 
before they would bow the knee to Rome. We 
do not wish our young kindred to become 
bigots, or to hate the Catholic Church. But 
we would have them know how much their 
ancestors had a right to their love and reli- 
gious faith, and we would have them love the 
religion of their fathers the best because it is 
their own. Protestantism is their mother 
church, and they should love it best as they 
love their own mother. They should be true to 
its religion, as long as it is true to Christ, and 
give to it the unwasted strength of their 
youth. They should endeavor to add some 
new leaves to the unfading chaplet of their an- 
cestor's religion which has marked the many 



388 THE HONORABLE POSTEltlTY. 

Ch ap. IV . generations adown tlie track of time, that 
"The Lord shall count, when he writeth up 
the people, that this man was born there": 

"He that to ancient wreaths can bring no more 
From his own worth, dies bankrupt on the score." 

And they should also prepare their offspring 
for their legacy. The heir of a nobleman must 
be educated so as to be fitted for his position. 
The heir of a throne needs special training in 
order that he may enter upon the duties as 
well as the privileges of royalty. It would be 
useless to bequeath a library to a man who had 
no interest in literature, or to leave an art 
collection to a man of boorish tastes. The heir 
must be suited to the inheritance. We hear 
much of the acquisition of an honorable name 
and blessed religion, and some seem to act as 
though all they had to do is to talk about it. 
But what of the minors who are yet to inherit 
it? If they are not prepared to heir it, will 
they not likely mar it? And is it not true, 
that a pound of posterity is worth a ton of 
ancestry? The potent duty then of every 
descendant is not to vaunt his inheritance, but 
to prepare his offspring to honor it, by a life 
of moral worth and religious faith, that, as one 
generation passeth away and another cometh 
there may be no break in that line of life which 
has made Huguenot descent honorable and 
pious. The home of every lineal descendant 
should be a center, in which the conserving 
forces of truth and godliness are themselves 
conserved. A child's religious faith is, in a 
high and holy sense, to be chosen for him by 
anticipation, by those who were in Christ 
before him. Naturally, a child's life is an in- 
quiring life. He will neither wildly tear up 



POTENT DUTY OF DESCENDANTS. 389 

and obliterate "the old paths/ ^ nor will he C hap, iv . 
walk in them heedlessly and without inquiry. 
And what can be more charming than the hon- 
est, eager inquisitiveness of the young for 
reasons which governed the faith and life of 
his ancestors'? And specially delightful is 
such inquiry, when parents are able to return 
a good answer, and from their hearts will let 
flow, as rivers of living waters, those truths 
which made the Huguenots a religious people, 
until the heart of the offspring becomes satu- 
rated with them. We urge this as the potent 
duty of every descendant who has children. It 
is God^s way of perpetuating religion. With- 
out it, religion would die out; with it a holy 
seed will be preserved in times of greatest 
declension, and to remotest posterity. Child- 
ren will ever be what parents make them, and 
the world will ever be what the family is. 

To nobly live is grand to live, 

To leave our deeds behind, 
That they, who shall become our heirs, 

Eieh heritage may find. 

Parents to heirs will e'er convey 

The impress of their lives; 
Live as they will, do as tliey may. 

They are their children's dies. 

The earthly life is in the blood. 

Inherited from man ; 
'Tis God of souls, who lifts the soul. 

And makes our living grand. 

G<od of our fathers, be the God 

Of our succeeding heirs; 
Lift up their souls, keep pure their blood, 

And evermore be theirs. 



APPENDIX. 



APPENDIX. 

Some Descendants of Dr. John Dupuy of Neiv York 

City. 

Dr. Jolin^Dupuy, of New York city; An eminent Dr. jno.' 
Surgeon in the early days of that city, where he ^"puy. 
settled as a Huguenot refugee, about 1713, having ^^^ ^' ^^" 
emigrated from France by way of England and 
Jamaica; "Ancien" in the old French Huguenot 
Church, du St. Esprit, and later, a member and 
pew-holder in Trinity church. New York city; b. in 
France, 1679; d.. New York ety, 1744, and buried 
in Trinity Church (city) graveyard; m. Ann Char- 
davoine, b., 1693; d., 1764; (Daughter of Elie Char- 
davoine, of Saujon, in Saintogne, France, m., in 
Huguenot church, N. Y". cty., Aug. 24, 1692, Anne 
Valleau from L'Isle de Ee; Some of his descendants 
live in Ala. ) . Issue : 

I. Dr. John^Dupuy, of N. Y. cty; An Eminent Dr. jno.= 
professor of Surgery and Medicine; b., 1717; d., i^^puy. 
1745, whose tombstone is inserted in the wall of the 
vestibule of old Trinity Church; m. Frances Ellis- 

ter; (Daughter of Robert Ellister, Collector of his 
Majesty's Customs, N. Y. cty., from 1722 to 1755). 

II. DaniePDupuy, of Philadelphia, Pa.; Manu- DanieF 
facturer of gold and silver; Member of Christ's Dupuy. 
Church, Phila., Pa. ; b., N. Y. cty.. May 10, 1719 ; d., 
Phila., Pa., Aug. 30, 1807, and buried in Christ's 
church graveyard; m., 1746, Mrs. Eleanor Dvland- 

er, b., 1719; d., 1805; (Widow of Rev. John Dyland- 
er, rector of Swedes Church, Phila., Pa., d., 1741; 
Daughter of Peter Cox, who married Margaret 
Matson ; Daughter of Peter Matson, who married, 
1674, Catherine Rnmbo. To Peter Matron, tlio Duke 
of York granted, 1676, a patent of ]an<l of 300 acres, 
a portion of which, named Clover Hill, became the 
county-seat of the Dupuy family, and remained in 
their possession uninterruptedly for a periorl of 
174 years, and is now a part of the city of Phila- 



392 



APPENDIX. 



Jno.« 
Dupuy. 



Dan.« 

Dupuy. 



Jno.* 
Dupuy. 



Chas. M." 
Dupuy. 



delphia, Pa., and closely built up, known as "Gray's 
Ferry" ) Below. 

Daniel^Dupuy, m. Mrs. Eleanor Dylander (p. 391). 

Issue: 

I. John^Dupuy, of Philadelphia, Pa.; Volunteer 
in Capt. George Taylor's Company, of the 1st Regi- 
ment of Infantry, Major David Reese, Army of the 
Revolution. Never married. 

II. DaniePDupuy, of Philadelphia, Pa.; Manu- 
facturer of gold and silver; b., Phila., Pa., May 3, 
1753; d., Phila., Pa., July 30, 1826; m., Oct.' 23, 
1783, Mary Meredith, b., 1757; d., 1832; (Daughter 
of Charles Meredith, b., 1719; d., 1783; A merchant 
of Phila., Vestryman in the old Christ Protestant 
Episcopal Church, 1768-72, one of the incorporators 
of the Philadelphia Library Company with Benja- 
min Franklin, and signer, Oct. 25, 1765, of the 
"Non-importation Resolution, opposing the Stamp 
Act," now framed in the Philadelphia State 
House). Issue: 

i. John^, of Philadelphia, Pa.; Merchant of 
same cty., and prominent socially in his day; b., 
Phila., Pa., May 2, 1789 ; d., Phila., Pa., Feb. 25, 
1865 ; m.. May 18, 1820, Mary Richards Haskins, 
b., 1800; d., 1858; [Daughter of Rev. Thos. Has- 
kins, of Dorchester Co., Md., b., 1760; d., 1816; 
m. 1st., 1785, Martha Potts, b., 1764; d., 1789 
leaving a daughter, Sarah, who married Jesse 
Richards of Batsto, N. J. ; m. 2d., 1799, Eliza- 
beth Richards, b., 1771 ; d., 1857, Sister of his 
Son-in-law, Jesse Richards, and daughter of 
William Richards, of Batsto, N. J., b., 1738 ; d., 
1823, the owner of several iron works and large 
landed estates. The other daughter, Martha, of 
Elizabeth (Richards) Haskins, married John 
Wurts, of N. Y. cty., who was the organizer and 
president of the Delaware and Hudson Canal 

Company] Page, 393 

ii. Rev. Charles Meredith^; Clergyman of the 
Protestant Episcopal Church ; Lived and died in 



DESCENDANTS OF DR. JOHN^DUPUY. 393 

DaniePDupuy, m. Mrs. Eleanor Dylander (p. 391). 
Issue — Continued : 

Philadelphia, Pa. ; b., 1792; d., 1875; m. Hannah 
Huddle. No issue. 

John^Dupuy, in. Mary Richards Easkins, (p. 392). 

Issue: 

I. Charles Meredith^ Dupuy, of New York cty. ; chas. m.» 
Civil Engineer, and in his younger days Superin- Dupuy. 
tendent of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Co.; 
Organizer of the Land Department of the I. C. R. 
R., which system has since been followed by all land- 
grant railroads; Pushed the development of a new 
line of railroad between Philadelphia and New 
York, which in 1871 was known as the National 
R. R. ; Instrumental in securing from tlie Legisla- 
ture of N. J., and of making successful the present 
"Free Railroad" law, and the Del. and B, B. R. R., 
the Reading R. R.'s present outlet to New York 
was finally built; Long identified with the Manu- 
facture of "direct iron" from ores, to be used in the 
production of fine steels, and probably did more 
than any one else to push its development ; Author 
of many articles on "Industrial Activity," among 
the masses; In 1875, his article, "Wasted Facul- 
ties," attracted much attention, and in 1870, an- 
other article, "Work for the Workers," was pub- 
lished in many newspapers in this country and also 
in Europe; more than 100,000 pamphlet copies were 
freely circulated at the time from a philanthropic 
desire to aid mankind; An opponent of Socialism 
and an advocate of the more equitable adjustment 
of the profits of labor by a better education of the 
masses, by which civilization can be only perma- 
nentlv advanced; Vice I'resident of the Huguenot 
Society of America; b., Phila., Pa., Dec. 14, 1823; 
m., June 10, 1853, Ellen Maria Reynolds, b. ]Mar. 
17, 1833; d. Nov. 27, 1898; [Daughter of Rev. 
John and Eleanor (Evans) Reynolds, of the P. E. 
ch. ; gr. dau. of Rev. Jno. Reynolds, ordained 1785 



394 APPENDIX. 

John^Dupuy, m. Mary Richards Haskins (p. 309). 
Issue — Continued. 

(the father of 20 children), and also of Owen and 
Eleanor (Lane) Evans; gt. gr. dan. of Edward 
Lane; gt. gt. gr. dau. of Edward and Ann (dan. of 
Owen Evans) Lane; gt. gt. gt. gr. dau. of Wm. 
Lane, the owner of large tracts of land about Perk- 
iomin, Motgomery Co., Pa; gt. gt. gt. gt. gr. dau. of 
Edward Lane, Son of William, who came from Bris- 
tol, Eng., in 1680, and who married Ann Richard- 
son, (dau. of Judge Samuel Richardson, of Phila., 
Pa.), and he the son of Sir Thomas Lane, Lord 
Mayor of London.] Below 

Charles Meredith^ Dupuy, m. Ellen Maria Reyn- 
olds, (p. 393). Issue: 

Herbert" J. Herbert^ Dupuy, of Pittsburg, Pa. ; Metal lur- 

upuy. gi^^Y Chemist; Manufacturer of Steel; b., Chicago, 

111., May 10, 1856; m., Nov. 6, 1879, Amy Hostetter, 

b. Jan. 22, 1858; (Daughter of David Hostetter). 

Issue * 

i. Harry Wilfred^ b. Sept. 27, 1880. 

ii. Eleanor^ ) ^ ^2, 1882. 

111. Amy', ) 

iv. Charles Meredith^ b. June 24, 1884. 

Ancestry of Mr. Geo. A. Dupuy, of Chicago, III. 

As far as known, his great grand-father, 
Joseph Dupuy, Jr., lived in Christian Co., Ky., 
about 1806-15, as shown from official records 
in that Clerk's Office. In the year 1812, a 
patent of Illinois land was issued him, and 
about that time he moved to that state where 
most of his children married. Whence he 
came to Kentucky, and of what progenitor of 
Dupuys is unknown at present. 



ANCESTRY OF GEORGE A. DUPUY. 395 

Joscph^Dupiiy, h. Mar. 12, 1776; m. Rebecca 
Nichols, h. iSept. 3, 1777. Issue : 

I. Elizabeth^Dupuy, b. Feb. 15, 1798; m. Rev. 
Thomas Pulliam, of Illinois. 

II. George N^. Dupuy, b. Jan. 18, 1800; m. Ludy 
Outhouse. Issue : 

i. Thomas W., b. Dec. 11, 1824. ii. Mary T^., 
b. Jan. 15, 1827. iii. John W^., b. Jan. 22, 1829. 
iy. Elizabeth^, b. Jan. 11, 1831. v. Jesse G^., 
b. Apr. 5, 1833. 

vi. William M^., b. July 17, 1835; m. . Issue: 

(i) George A^ of Chicago, 111. 
vii. Susanna^, b. Feb. 6, 1838. viii. Joseph H^., 
b. Sept. 22, 1840. 

ix. Nancv^, b. Nov. 29, 1841. x. Martha^ b. 
Nov. 29, 1844. 

III. William^Dupuy, b. Mar. 29, 1801. IY. 
David-Dupuy, b. Feb. 8, 1804. 

Y. Pleasant-DupuT, b. Oct. 25, 1805. YI. Lem- 
uePDupuy, b. Feb. 2, 1808. 

YII. Susanna^Dupuy, b. Nov. 5, 1809. VIII. 
Mary^DupuY, b. July 16, 1811. 

IX. Rebecca^Dupuy, b. Sept. 20, 1813. X. 
Martha^Dupuy, b. Aug. 8, 1815. 

XI. Sarali-bupuy, b. Dec. 6, 1817. XII. Thomas 
N2. Dupuy, b. Dec. 9, 1821. 

Ancestry of Mr. J. D. Dupuy, of San Antonio.Tex. 

In a letter addressed to the author, Mr. J. D. 
Dupuy says: "As I understand, this is the 
branch of the family (Bartholomew Dupuy 's) 
to which five sisters, and five brothers, all 
now living and myself belong. I hand you 
herewith a copy of a memorandum made by 
one of my sisters while in conversation with 
our old father a short while before his death. 
This will enable you to determine whether or 
not we are of the old stock in which you are 
interested: — Our great grand father DuPuy 



396 APPENDIX. 

was born and raised in Bordou, France; 
married there and shortly afterwards came to 
Virginia, near Richmond, and there reared his 
family, which consisted of two girls and four 
boys, named respectively, William, James, 
Joseph and David; the girls, Elizabeth and 
Deborah. Our grand-father, David DuPuy 
was horn in Virginia, July 8, 1776, and went to 
Kentucky at an early date, and married Miss 
Ellen Ross, daughter of Capt. Wm. Ross, 
whose mother was a Miss Elizabeth Hughes. 
Our grand-father lived in Christian Co., Ky. 
Raised six boys and two girls, named respec- 
tively, Alfred, David, William, Cicno, Albert 
(my father) and Joseph, — girls, Elizabeth and 
Maria." 

The similarity of names would indicate that 
these two families are descendants of Barthol- 
omew Dupuy, and there are a few early 
branches from him, which if sufficiently devel- 
oped might show where they come in, but more 
accurate and full information will have to be 
presented before they can be connected. It is 
possible also that they are descended from 
other of the four Dupuy progenitors (p 91), 
who immigrated to America. There is no rea- 
son why persistant search should not perfect 
each line of descent. 



INDEX. 



397 



Abbott, Nannie M., 348. 

Adams, Kirtley, Nathan, 372. 

Adger, Jane T., John, 309. 

Adkins, Elvira, 275. 

Agoust, Spy- Advocate, 100; pur- 
chased Dupuy's home, 126; 
betrayed Dupuy, 129. 

Albright, 275. 

Albritten, Lawrence, 214. 

Alencon, Duke of, youngest son 
of Catherine De Medici and 
Francis II, 53; offended by 
his mother, 53; arrested, 53; 
deserted court party, 56. 

Alexander, Juliet Dickinson, 
Sallie Cabell, William C, Rev. 
William Clawson, 230. 

Allen, Allison, 334; Amy Leon- 
ard, 339; Bettie, 257; Carrie, 
334; David Hugh, 339, 339; 
E., 351; Edward, 334; Flo- 
rinda, 325 ; Force, James Wil- 
liam, 339; Kate, 274; Lucy 
Owen, Martha Ann, 339; 
Nancy, 363; Eichard, 193; 
Samuel Waters, Sarah Gath- 
rite, 339; Susan, 334; Stephen- 
son Waters, 339; William H., 
280, 334; William Henderson, 
339. 

Allensworth, Allen P., James T., 
334. 

Almond, Thomas A., 213. 

Alvis, Blanche O., James F., 
James O., John Napoleon, 
Rose, 310. 

Amboise, Tumult at, 32; peace 
of, 40. 

Ames, Charles, 354. 

Anderson, 285; Abner, 232; 
Archer, 306; Eliza, G., 297; 
Henry, 252; Jean Hamilton, 
306; La Villon Dupuy, 222; 
Lelia, 307; Martha, 297; May, 
322; Pauline Daniel, 222; 
Robert, 319; Rev. Robert C, 
222; Sallie, 297; Samuel A., 
222, 222 ; Sarah. Sarah ( Prew- 
itt), Thomas, 369. 

Andrews, John E., Phoebe E., 
323. 

Anjou, Duke of, son of Cath- 
erine, defeated the Huguenots, 
44; Royal Commander in 4th 
war, 52; King of Poland, 52; 
death of, 57. 



Anne, of Austria, wife of Louis 
XIII, 71; Regent of the King- 
dom, 80. 

Antoine, King of Navarre, 30; 
Bourbon aspirant to throne, 
30; objects to arms, 31; mes- 
senger to Queen Mother, 31; 
Lieut-General, 34; espouses 
Catholic cause, 39; death 
of, 40. 

Applewhite, George Edwin, 182. 

Archer, Elizabeth, 251; Eliza- 
beth (Roval), John, Martha 
Field, 250; Peterfield, Rich- 
ard, 251. 

Ardinger, Bessie, 372; Caroline 
Dupuy, 371; Elizabeth, Eu- 
gene, 372; Euginia Margaret, 
371; Horace, 372, 372; Hugh 
Little, 372; John H., 371; 
Martha, Mary Jane, Robert 
Oliver, 372; Sarah Thomas, 
371. 

Arms, Coats of, 90; Laws of 
Heraldry on, 90. 

Armstrong, Mary, 295. 

Arnold, Andrew Jackson, 245; 
Frances, 246; Frank, 246; Dr. 
Leonard W., 245. 

Ashby, Ann, 336. 

Ashley, Gen. William H., 365. 

Athey, Anna Bell, 249. 

Atkinson, Elizabeth, 303; Fran- 
ces, 180; John, Nancy, Patsy, 
261; Thomas, 180, 261. 

Bacon. Katherine, 356. 

Badger, 362. 

Badgley, Margaret, Sherman, 
William, 324. 

Bagby, Alice Anne, Ermine, 
Ermine A., Ermine C, Frank- 
lin, George W., Henry Dudly, 
James Franklin, James H., 
John T., Luther H., Luther 
William, Mary Lou, Oliver 
H., Raymond, Raymond 0., 
Taylor, Rev. William Buck, 
Willie J., 326. 

Bailey, Clinton, Eliza Johna- 
phine, Hodgie T., Milton Fen- 
elon, Nannie Olympia, Or- 
lando Trabue, Theodore 0., 
322. 

Bain, Marian, William, 348. 

Baird, William, 287. 



398 



INDEX. 



Baker, Elizabeth, 329; Eugene, 
Mary, 362; M. Burk, Nellie, 
Robert H., 329; Stella, Wil- 
liam, 362. 

Barksdale, Lavalette, 231 ; Lucy 
J., 215; W. H., William, Tra- 
bue, 297. 

Barnett, Allen 0., Emma E., 
Mary E., 323. 

Barnwell, John Singleton, Rob- 
ert, Robert W., 256. 

Barrett, 297. 

Barrickman, Cecil B., Laura E., 
Lewis, William C, Una Beu- 
lah, 348. 

Barrow, Benjamin, Benjamin 
Franlclin, Cassanda, John 
Armstead, Mary Elizabeth, 
Nannie, Orm Williams, Peter 
Thomas, Robert, Watkins, 
204. 

Bartlett, Martha, 348. 

Basey, 336. 

Baskerville, Sarah, 238. 

Bassett, Burwell, Charles Hor- 
ace, Eugene Stuart, Mar- 
garet Jane, Mary Belle, Maude 
Woodson, Paul Ardinger, Dr. 
S. T., Samuel Taylor, 371. 

Bate, 358. 

Bateman, Benne May, Claude, 
Dupuy, Jefferson, John, John 
Washington, Ralph, 305. 

Bates, Charles, Gertrude, Lo- 
rena, Myra, William, 323. 

Baughman, 352. 

Baxter, Mary, 299. 

Bayly, Fannie (Holladay), 219; 

Beamer, Blanche H., Daisy, 
Joseph Hodgen, Richard Fred., 
Richard H., Olivia La Rue, 
287. 

Beaner, Averett, 272, 273; 
Herschell, Lois Francis, 272; 
Marie, Richard, 273; William 
A., 272; Zelma, 273, 

Beam, Independent State re- 
duced by Louis Xm to a 
province, 73. 

Beasley, 267. 

Beattie, Anna Parker, Arthur 
Nelson, Fannie Marye, Gar- 
nett Minter, Henry Atwood, 
James Ervin, John Dean, 
John Dunn, Lillian Marye, 
Lulie Beall, Minnie Dunn, 



Robt. Bruce, Robert Marye, 
Rosa, Thomas Beall, 278. 

Beatty, James M., Eddie Jack, 
Ruby Pearl, 311. 

Beauleau, Peace of, 54. 

Beckley, Cheatham, Edwin S., 
John Robinson, William R., 
341. 

Beebe, Mary, 234. 

Beeby, Lucy B., 317. 

Begg, Rev. William, 355. 

Bell, 291, 303; John D., 291. 

Belt, Benjamin LloyT, H. Sin- 
gleton, Dr. H. Singleton, Mary 
D., Walter G., 195. 

Beltonnet, Citizen of Trem- 
blade, 117. 

Bent, Lucy, 368. 

Benton, Samuel, 274. 

Bergerac, Peace of, 56. 

Berkley, Dr. Peyton R., 217. 

Berquin, Louis, Reformer, char- 
acter of, 10; martyred, 11. 

Berry, Alice, 318; Edmonia, 
279; John Thomas, Margaret 
Olivia, 244; Col. Robert, 318; 
Thomas Dorsey, William El- 
bert, 244. 

Berryman, Rev. J. C, 236. 

Bevington, 334. 

Beza, Theodore, tribute of to 
Lefevre, 5, to Farel, 6, to 
Francis I, 12; versified part 
of the Psalms, 26; Protest- 
ant Leader at Conference of 
Poissy, 35. 

Bibb, Dooley, 310; Mary, 309. 

Bill, Lucy, 321. 

Bishop, Lucy, 296. 

Black, Jennie, 327. 

Blackburn, C, 301 ; Col. Robert, 
Sarah, 293. 

Blair, 187, 193. 

Bland, Cornelia Ann, 228; E. U., 
319; John Archer, 228; John 
Bacon, 329; Martha Rebecca, 
Mary Elizabeth, 228; Mary 
L., 328; Robert, 228; Robert 
T., 329; Theodore, 328. 

Blanton, Frances Camilla (Blan- 
ton). Gillie (Colley), Dr. Hugh 
Lawrence, 209; Prof. Joe. P., 
369; Joseph, Lawrence, Lelia 
Morton, 209; Martha, 369; 
Susan (Walker), 209. 



INDEX. 



399 



Blevins, Hester, Mary, Ocean, 
323. 

Blythe, A. D., Arnold D., Jessie, 
Mary F., Mary Force, Nellie, 
Robert P., Samuel Jiidson, 
276. 

Bodeker, Edith Chester, Edwin 
Broaddus, Louise Wlieeler, 
351. 

Bodston, Mary, 61, 265. 

Boenem, Gertie Williams, 92. 

Boggess, Barnabas, 321. 

Bohannon, Mildred, Richard, 
293. 

Boiling, John, Robert, 187. 

Bond, 271; Minnie, 286. 

Booker, Nannie C, 240; Nelia, 
235; Boone Daniel, 262; Jane, 
273. 

Boozier, Henry, 359, 359. 

Boston, Bettie Ragland, 256. 

Bouillon, Godfrey, Duke of Lor- 
raine, 88. 

Bouillon, Huguenot Commander, 
74. 

Boulevere, Mary, 311. 

Boulware, Lemuel Ford, Sanf ord 
O., 353. 

Bourbons, Eoyal family and 
aspirants to throne, 30; con- 
ference of, 31. 

Boursiquot. Anne, Fontain's be- 
trothed. 116; Elizabeth, 116. 

Bowen, Ellen, 202. 

Bowie, Emma, 284. 

Bowman, Col., Eulalie, 369. 

Bowyer, Alice, 235. 

Boyd, Corinne Fall, 319; Hen- 
rietta (Garland), Rev. James, 
James Granville, 252; Mary, 
321. 

Bovle, Mary, McKinley, Ran- 
dolph, St. John, Telford, 367. 

Brackenridge, J. Thomas, 346. 

Braden, Bell, 317. 

Bradley, Dr. David, 274; Eu- 
gene, Jennie, John, Mabel, 
Melcena, Thomas, 333. 

Brand, Abraham Owen, Eliza- 
beth Hay, 340; George Wash- 
ington, 339, 340; John Hay, 
339; Laura Shirley, 340. 

Branham, Albert, 2^4, 274; Al- 
vin, 274; Edward, 342; Ellen, 
John T., 274; Joseph Simeon, 
342; Laura, Mary, Olivia, Sal- 



lie. 274; Thomas Bartholo- 
mew, 342. 

Brannin, Abraham Owen, 339; 
Agnes, 341; Alice Barbee, 
340; Ann, 356; Bettie, 341; 
Carle B., 356; Clark, Clarke 
L., 341; Daniel, 338, 341, 341, 
356, 356; Edward B., 356; 
Edwin S., 341; Elizabeth, 339, 
356; Elizabeth W., 342; Ella, 
356; Grosvenor, Horace C, 
341; .James Roberts, 339; 
James W., John S., 341; 
Laura, 340; Lewis, Lewis Ed- 
ward, Martha, 356; Martha 
Ann, 340; Mary, Miriam, 
Miriam H., 341; Owen Edwin, 
Owen M., 340; Rector, Sallie, 
Samuel Dupuy, 356; Sophro- 
nia, 341; Sophronia Summers, 
340; Webster, 342, 356. 

Briconnet, William, Bishop of 
Meaux and Reformer, 67; 
commends Lefevre's commen- 
taries to Marguerite, 15; re- 
canted, 17. 

Bridges, Charles, Clifford Cabell, 
Condie Roy, Courtney B., 
David, David Quarrier, Evelyn 
Condie, Florence, Ida Hair- 
ston, Julia Cabell, Kate Con- 
die, Katherine Louisa, Lelia 
Carroll, Lucy Cary, Lizzie, 
Maggie Fergusson, Martha 
Caskie, Mary, Mollie, Philip 
St. George, William Kennon, 
William McKinney, 243. 

Bridgwater, Dallie, 315. 

Briggs, Mary, 268. 

Bright, Horatio, 286. 

Brinker, Mary Coleman, Mor- 
ton, 342. 

Briscoe, George M., Owen Tra- 
bue. 309. 

Brooke, Sarah, 301. 

Brooks, 291. 

Broome, Anne, 257. 

Brown, 297; Annie, 355; Annie 
B., 306; Charles Dudly, 246; 
Charlotte Eugenia, Cynthia 
Jane, 314; Ella P., 308; Flora 
Frances, Flora Ilattie, 306; 
Frank, 234; George T., 308; 
John, 365; John Crutcher, 
306; J. P. W.. John P. W., 
308; Col. John Thompson, 258. 



400 



INDEX. 



Brown, Maggie Lynn, Mary Jo- 
sephine, 306; Mary Louise, 
314; Mary Marshall, 234; 
Nannie, 325; Dr. Oscar, 297; 
Rev. Paul T., 215; Robert 
Garland, 306, 306; Sallie C, 
373; Samuel Bradford, 306; 
Samuel P.. 308; Susan, 297; 
William, 314. 

Browning, William, 263. ' 

Bruce, Lucretia, 353. 

Bruden, Marietta, 226. 

Bruner, Mary, 309. 

Brunning, Charles T, Dock 
Harding, Elizabeth, Emma J., 
Eva Harding, Hester 0., Jacob 
W., Llewellyn Russell, Malissa 
Quinn, Mary N., Nellie, Per- 
kins, 311. 

Bryant, 286. 

Buchanan, Amanda, 364; Nellie, 
334. 

Buck, Ermine Field, Geddings 
J., Geddings Judson, Harri- 
son D., Mary A., Mary D., 
Miriam Olive, Nellie Faulk- 
ner, Ollie Halbert, Raymond, 
Raymond H., 325. 

Buckley, Col. Harvey, Reuben, 
348. 

Buckner, Mattie, 330. 

Budd, Dr. Geo. Alex., 346. 

Buford, 282. 

Buhler, Frederick, Frederick Du- 
puy, Marguerite, Theodore B., 
347. 

Bull, Rev. Griffin William, Lucy 
Eggleston, Mary Holland, 241. 

Bullard, Oscar, 274. 

Burch, Martha, 242. 

Burgess, Lillian, 344. 

Burks, Nannie, 351. 

Burnett, B. W., Cornelia E., 
242; Mary V., 223. 

Burnham, Mary, 362. 

Burr, Ella, 280. 

Burton, Joseph, William, 287. 

Butler, Amanda B., 188. 

Bynam, Alvin, Milton, Susan, 
276. 

Byram, Hal., 342. 

Cabell, Agnes Bell, 367; Ashley, 
Carrington, 366; Hon. Ed- 
ward Carrington, 365; Eliza- 
beth Crittenden, 367; Florida, 



366; John J. Crittenden, 367; 
Margaret, 366; Mary Hope, 
367; Seldon, William H., 366. 

Caldwell, 348; Alice L., 286; 
Ann Eliza, 285; Ann Jane, 
284; Annie Moffatt, 354; 
Augusta, 286; Augusta Alice, 
354; Catherine, 286; Elizabeth 
Haskins, 284, 320; Franklin 
Dupuy, 354; George, 286, 286; 
George Alfred, 285; Hattie, 
286; Hickman Walker, Hin- 
ton, Hugh, 300; Isaac, Isaac 
Palmer, 286; James Guthrie, 
285; Jennie, 286; J. O., 316; 
John, John Andrew, John 
Irby, 300; Joseph M., 354; 
Julia S., 315; Junius, 286, 
286; Lucy Amanda, 300; 
Luther, 286, 286, 286; Mar- 
garet, 286; Mary, 286, 300; 
Mary Fawcett, 354; Mary 
Lucretia, Mary Phoebe, 286; 
Mary Sweeter, 354; Phoebe 
Lucretia, 285; Priscilla, Rob- 
ert. Sallie, Samuel, Tiba, 286; 
William, 284, 286; William 
Beverly, 285; Dr. William 
Beverly, 285. 

Callaway, Edwin, Frances R., 
338. 

Calvin, John, Influence of on 
Reformation, 24. 

Campbell, 336; Edith Pearle, 
293; Edward, 284; James An- 
drew, Jennie (Marshall), John, 
293; Pualston, 288; Rev. 
Thomas Sale, 192; William 
H., 340. 

Cannon, Grace, 268; John, 252; 
Lottie. Newton, 268; William, 
252, 252. 

Capet, Hugues, 2. 

Oarlyle, Alexander, Alva, Clad- 
dius, Lutie, 331. 

Carothers, Beattie, Charles, J. 
A., Laura Minter, Robert, 
Rosa, 278. 

Carrington, Dr. John S., Wood 
B., 326. 

Carpenter, Cornelia, 354. 

Carson, Mary, 369. 

Carstarphin, Ezra Thomas, 
James Henry, Mary, William 
Eugene, William Robert, 314. 



INDEX. 



401 



Carter, Benjamin, 275; Charles 
Everett, 257; Dr. Charles 
Warner Lewis, Edward, 251; 
Elizabeth Gallaway, 201; El- 
len, Isaac, 275; Lucy Smith, 
Martha Champe, 257; Mary 
Lewis, 256; Mary Randolph 
(Lewis), 251; Susan, 275. 

Casimer, John, German Prince, 
42. 

Castleman, David R., 342; David 
Rawson, 343; James, 342; 
Laura, 343; Samuel Torbitt, 
William Pryon, 342. 

Cass, Anne, Elmo, Jesse Lee, 
Mary Lula, Moty Dupuy, Na- 
thaniel, Dr. Nathanial, Susie, 
Walter, 224. 

Catherine De Medici, wife of 
Henry II, 22; Regent, 30; 
favored Guise family, 31; 
rejected proposals of the 
Bourbons, 31; conciliated 
Bourbons, 34; counselled with 
Coligny, 35; called the con- 
ference of Poissy, 35; plotted 
to exterminate the Protest- 
ants, 41 ; convened the thir- 
teen Parliaments, 41; flees 
from Monceaux, 42; enraged 
and formulated new edicts, 
43; proposed marriages, 46; 
conduct of in bringing on 
Massacre of St. Bartholomew's 
Day. 48; arrested Henry and 
Alencon, 53; death and char- 
acter of, 59. 

Catlett, 335. 

Caviller, Forestine, 295. 

Cayce, Alice Adele, 238; Alice 
J., 236; Elizabeth Dupuy, 277 ; 
E. P., Elsie E., Julian Paul, 
Lillian Maude, 238; M. P., 
236; Nannie C, 237. 

Chadborne, Lucy, 367. 

Chaise, Pere la, Jesuit confessor 
of Louis XIV, 82. 

Chambers, Elizabeth (Buford), 
303. 

Chapin, Pauline, 368. 

Chaplin, Eliza, Belle. 363, 304; 
Isaac, 363. 

Chappall, 296. 

Chardavoine, Annie, Elie, 391. 

Charenton, Ekiuoational Center 



of the Huguenots in France, 
79. 
Charles, Cardinal of Lorraine, 
counselled extermination of 
Protestants, 29; aspirant to 
Throne, 30; Catholic leader 
at Conference of Poissy, 35; 
narrowly escaped capture, 42; 
solemnized marriage of Henry 
and Marguerite, 47; death of, 
54. 

Charles IX, King, 34; is peti- 
tioned for toleration, 34; Em- 
bassy of German Princes to, 
41; letter of to Pope, 45; 
conduct of towards Coligny 
when latter was shot, 47; 
confessions of, 51; character 
and death of, 53. 

Chastain, Anne, Anne (Sublett), 
147; Belinda, Charles, 148; 
Charlotte, 144; Estienne, 143, 
144, 144, 148; Jane, 147; Jean, 
142, 143, 144; John, 142, 143, 
148; Marianne, 143, 148; 
Martha, 144, 144, 148; Martha 
(Dupuy), will of, 152; Mary 
Magdalene, 144, 249; Peter, 
144; Pierre, 142, 144, 147; 
Prince, 148; Stephen, 144, 179, 
250. 

Cliatteaubriand, edict of, 26. 

Chatelars, wood of, 97. 

Chattillon, conference at, 42. 

Chattillons, Bourbons, 31. 

Ch&atham, 298; Aaron, Charles, 
Claiborne, Emma, 323; Mar- 
tha, 319. 

Chenault, Sherly, 198. 

Chew, James, Mildred, Thomas, 
290. 

Chinn, 358. 

Chi vers, Eulalie, Henry D., 347. 

Christian, Eliza J., 255. 

Churchill, William Forbs, 256. 

Clanoc, Huguenot town, 76. 

Clapp, Aubrey Beard, Jerry 
Watkins, Robert Parker, W. 
L., Walter Lucas, 280. 

Clardv, 370; Martin, Martin L., 
Virginia C, 237. 

Clark, 267; Elmer. 359; James 
B., 323; John Walker, 218; 
Gen. Roger, 262; Samuel, 
William Townes, 218. 



402 



INDEX. 



Clarkson, 364, 365; Anselm, Ed- 
ward Trabue, 301; Edwin, 
283; Emily, 301; Ferdinand, 
George G., 283; George W., 
Green Clay, James M., 301; 
Jennie, 283; Margaret, 369; 
Martha, 283; Martha Has- 
kins, Mary, 301 ; Minter, 283 ; 
Nancy Pittman, 301; Walter, 
William C., William 0., 283. 
Clay, 183, 230; Cliarles, 264; 
Edward, 262; Rev. Eleaza, 
264; Francis, 262; Hon. Henry, 
262,264; James, 262; Jane E., 
264; John, Judith, Martha, 
Mary, Phoebe, Samuel, Sarah, 
262. 
Clayton, Charles, George, Jane, 
John, Nancy, Philip, William, 
303. 
Clover, Rev. George Fred., 340. 
Cocke, Amelia Archer, Ann 
Waller, 256; Anna Allen, 255; 
Bettie Boston, 256; Bettie 
Chaffin, 253 ; Blanche Beverly, 
256; Bowler, 250; Catherine 
Archer, 254; Charles, 251; 
Chastain, 147, 250, 250, 251, 
252, 253, 253, 253, 253; Clar- 
ence Chastain, 256; Edward 
Eggleston, 254; Elizabeth 
Aubyn, Elizabeth Chastain, 
252; Elizabeth Royall, 250; 
Eloise, 256; Frances, 252; 
George W., 255; Grace Dud- 
ley, 256; Helen Martha, 254; 
James, 154, 249, 250, 252; 
James Everett, 252; James 
Powell, 249, 251, 251, 251; 
Jane Segar, 252; John Field, 
250, 255; John Lewis, 252; 
Joseph Archer, Joseph Eggles- 
ton, 251; Josephine, 253; Ju- 
dith, 251; Lucy Gary, 243; 
Margaret ( — ),249; Margaret 
Boston, 256 ; Martha, 249, 251, 
252, 252, 252; Martha Judith, 
253; Mary, Mary C, 251; 
Mary Catherine, 253; Mary 
Chastain, 252; Mary Eggles- 
ton, 254; Mary Magdalene, 
250; Mary Magdalene Chas- 
tain, 254; Mary Susan, Nan- 
cy, Omeron, 252; Rebecca 
Bently, 253; Richard, 250, 
252; Richard Herbert, 252; 



Dr. Richard Herbert, 250; 
Richard I., 255; Richard Ivan- 
hoe, 255, 256; Rowena Glow- 
ina, 256, 256; Sallie Meade, 
254; Smith, Stephen, Stephen 
Cannon, 251; Susan Anne, 
252; Thomas, Capt. Thomas, 
249; William Alexander, 253; 
William Archer, 250, 253, 253; 
William Ronald, 256, 256. 
Cockran, Carrie, 318. 
Cognac, Huguenot town, 45. 
Coit, Mary, 352. 
Colbert, Minister of State, 82. 
Cole, George, 287; Howson 
White, Dr. Howson White, 
232; Isora Hodgen, 287; 
Lavillon Dupuy, 232. 
Coleman, 337; James, 290; 
Louisa, 234; Sarah E., 347; 
Susan, Thomas, 290. 
Coligny, Admiral, plans expedi- 
tion to Brazil, 28; Adherent 
of Bourbon family, 31; ob- 
jects to arms, 31; presented 
petition .at Fontainbleau, 33; 
counseled toleration, 35; 
Huguenot General, 40; in- 
fluenced German Princes to 
send Embassy to King, 41; 
seizure of resolved on, 42, 
43; commander of Huguenot 
forces, 44; shot in Paris, 47; 
murdered, 49; body of abused, 
50. 
Collard, Hallie Garnett, Roger 

Lee, W. E., Willie E., 326. 
Collins, Davie Lindsay, 301; 
Edgar L., Harry S., 312; 
Julius, Marguerite, W. L., 
301. 
Colmery, Anna, Benjamin, Rev. 
Charles Pier, Clemmie, Hallie, 
William G., 327. 
Concini, favorite at French 
Court, 70; caused King's ma- 
jority to be declared, 71; 
slain, 72. 
Conde, Prince of (See Louis and 

Henry). 
Conley, Jane, 317. 
Conlon, John J., John Major, 

Joseph, Mary, Sarah, 273. 
Conly, Landon H., 279. 
Conrad II, Emperor of Ger- 
many, 88. 



INDEX. 



403 



Conroy, Mary, 193, 

"Conspirators, The," 194. 

Cook, Mary, 289. 

Cooley, Rev. Frank, 350. 

Cooper, J. Owen, James E., 
Susanne, Willim S., 338. 

Corben, Alice, 277. 

Corbin, 301; James M., 301. 

Cord, 194. 

Cormock, Frances, Gideon, May, 
291. 

Cosby, 351; Eliza F., 277; Eliza 
Jane, Elizabeth, 276; Eliza- 
beth Ann, 270; Joseph Min- 
ter, 276; Lucy Dupiiy, 269, 
276; Mary, 276; Sarah Ann, 
277; William H., 270; Wil- 
liam Henry, 277. 

Cotton, Charles, Emma Pur- 
year, Frances (Taylor), Sarah 
Blackburn (Puryear), Wil- 
liam, 293. 

Coutras, Battle of, 58. 

Coverston, Edna, 247; Wilson, 
246. 

Cowherd, Eev., 365. 

Cox, Lettie, 349; Peter, 391. 

Crabtree, Albert P., Georpe 
Watkins, Susan Warner, 197. 

Craig, C, 341; Lucy, 335; Mary, 
202, 341. 

Cralle, 229. 

Crampton, Ainice L., 286. 

Crane, J. F., 313; Vernon 
Earnest, Viola Marie, 314. 

Crawford, Albert, Belle, Caro- 
line, Eugene, Rev. John M., 
Maria Louise, Sallie, 356; 
Kev. William, 193. 

Crellin, Aneta Belle, 342. 

Crews, Sallie, 313. 

Crittenden, Hon. John Jordan, 

365. 
Crockett, Anne, 308. 
Crockette, Ethel, 226. 
Crosby, 353. 

Crossett, E. Delia, Henry A., 
Hodgen H., Otwell, Thaddeus, 
William M., 328. 
Crow, Brannin C, William C, 

William Edwin, 356. 
Croysdale, Margaret, William 

Edward, 294. 
Crump, Louisa, Simpson, 245. 
Crusaders, Badge of, 89. 



Crutcher, Agnes White, 305; 
Anna Lou, 304; Anna Trabue, 
Anna Belle, 305; Asa P., 
Bonner, Carrie, Earl, 304; 
Edward P., Edward Vaughan, 
Emma J., Flora Hattie, 305; 
Isaac Henry, 304, 304, 304; 
Jesse Grady, 304; Jessie, 305; 
Josie, Lem., 304; Lillian, 
Louis Clifford, Loulie May, 
Marcia Lelia, 305; Mary, 304; 
Mary Dupuy, Mattie, Nellie 
Dixie, 305 ; Pittman, 306 ; Rich- 
ard Lewis, Richard Luther, 
Williamson, 305. 

Cumming, James D., Kate, 
Mary, W. M., William Cooper, 
338. 

Cummings, Daisy, 195; Richard, 
348. 

Dabney, Mrs. Belle Moore, 318; 
John, Susanne, 290. 

D'Albert, Charles, Count of 
Luynes and Minister of State, 
72; influenced Richelieu to 
reconcile Louis XIII and his 
mother, 72; influenced Iving 
to move against Beam and 
Huguenot towns, 72; con- 
stable of Royal forces, 74; 
repulsed at Montauban and 
death, 76. 

D'Albret, Queen of Navarre, 
joined Conde and Coligny at 
La Rochelle, 43; presented 
Henry, her son, and Henry, 
son of the fallen Cortde, for 
princely leaders of Huguenots, 
44; death of, 46. 

Dameron, Catherine, Edward 
Caswell, Frances, George B., 
Logan Douglas, 296. 

Danforth, Capt. Henry Dela- 
plaine, John B., 231. 

Daniel, Agnes, 221; Ann Bev- 
erly, 185; Benjamin Watkins, 
Christina Agnes, Edwin Du- 
puy, 195; Fannie T. (Wat- 
kins), 239; Garland, 195; 
Gertrude Sherron. 222: Hes- 
ekiah Good, 194; Hulda Caro- 
line, 222; Jano Caroline, 
195: Joel Watkins. ISl, 
221, 222; John, 1S5; John 
Harper, 221; John Henry, 195. 



404 



INDEX. 



Daniel, Joseph M., 239; Lavillon 
Dupuy, 222; Mollie Angeline, 
195; Paulina Pocahontas, Pow- 
hatan Dupuy, Robert Eldridge, 
222; Robert P., 181; Robert 
Pride, 195; Sarah Anderson, 
221; Susan Ann, 194; Susan 
E., 239; William E., 195. 

Daniels, William R., 215. 

Darby, Jacob S., 324. 

Darling, Jesse Wilber, 248. 

Darnell, Edna Lou, Floy Llewel- 
lyn, Dr. John Clarkson, Paul, 
3*12. 

Daugherty, Bertie, 182. 

"Daughter, a Planter's," 194. 

Davenport, Benjamin, Chester, 
Jackson, Lucy, William, 335. 

Davidson, Henry H., James, 
Lemuel, Nathaniel, 358; Wil- 
liam, 189; Dr. William, Wil- 
liam H., 358. 

Daviess, Hannah, 306. 

Davis, Alice Fairleigh, 295; 
Benjamin, 335; Bettie, 286; 
Elizabeth S., 329; Eugenia, 
John A., Lee M., Minnie, 371; 
Randolph Milton, Randolph 
True, 295; T. B., 364; Tilton, 
Woodson, 371. 

Deathridge, Charles, Fackler, 
Lillian, Marian, 330. 

Dell, Harriet Pen., 304. 

Demorest, John W., Thomas, 
317. 

Denman, Allie, 328. 

De Ovval, Huguenot General, 
76. 

Devasher, Daniel, Elizabeth A., 
302. 

Devenport, George, 318. 

Dick, Amanda, 361. 

Dickerson, William, 310. 

Dickey, C, 270. 

Dickinson, Ann Carrington, 229 ; 
Asa Dupuy, 228, 229, 229; 
Charles, 231; Charles Bruce, 
230; Chloe, Clement Cabell, 
Clement Parks, 229; Elizabeth 
Guerrant, 229, 230; Frances 
Jane, Frank Watkins, 229; 
Dr. James Robert, 228; Jesse 
Irvine, John Purnell, 225; 
Juliet Massie, 230; Magda- 
lene, Mary, 231; Mary Anne, 
228; Mary Cabell, Mary Sed- 



don, 229; Millie, 231; Peyton, 
229; Robert, 188; Robert 
Carrington, Robert M., 229 j 
Rosa, 231; Sallie Bruce, Sallie 
Irvine, 229; Sarah Jane, 231; 
Thomas H., 228; Thomas 
Harris, 229; William Purnell, 
231. 

Dillon, Lucius Polk, 214. 

Dills, Agnes, John, John H., 
Leana, Mary E., P. Edward, 
Samuel B., William Cole, 291. 

Divine, Carrie, 281. 

Dixon, Lillian, 247. 

Dixson, 204; E. W., 204. 

Dodge, 289; Alice, Frank Du- 
puy, Helen, Henry A., Henry 
S., 354; Irene, 290; Jane 
Varick, Rev. John Varick, 
354. 

Dodson, Benjamin W., 204. 

Dorsey, 303, 363. 

Dowis, Gale, 359. 

Doyle, Catherine, 295. 

Dozier, Elvira, 362. 

Dragonnades, work of, 104. 

Drane, Adele, 346; Agnes, 345; 
Agnes Alice, Clarence, 346; 
Dr. Edward C, 342; Edward 
Crabb, 345; Edward Morton, 
346; George Canning, 345; 
George Keats, 346; Dr. Joseph 
Stephen, Judith Coleman, 345 ; 
Louise Shipman, Martha, 346; 
Paul Shipman, 345 ; Rosa, 307. 

Dreaux, Huguenot town, 40. 

Duburg, Anne, Reformer and 
member of Parliament, 28; 
executed, 29, 30. 

Duckworth, George, Lillian 
Belle, 296. 

Duncan, Ella, 229. 

Dunn, Ellen, 309. 

Du Puy, famed name in South 
East France, 87; meaning of, 
87. 

Dupuy, Achsah, 335; Adelaide 
Lawrence, 192; Agnes, 187; 
Agnes Josephine, 223; Agnes 
Mary, 249; Agnes Morton, 
224; Ainier, 176; Albert, 192,- 
193, 249, 358, 396; Albert G., 
246; Albert Montgomery, 
234; Alexander, 194, 234; 
Alfred, 193, 396; Alice Mirle, 
233; Alice Townes, 228. 



INDEX. 



405 



Dupuy, Alleman, Ist, 88, 175, 
2d, 3d, 4th, 5th, 175; Altha, 
193; Alva C, 182; Alvin 
Bowyer, 235; Amanda, 355; 
Amelia Elizabeth, 192; Amy, 
394; Andrew Low, 360; 
Ann Eliza, 23(5; Ann Lefevre, 
188, 232; Anna, 353; Anna 
Ellen, 248; Anna Rebecca, 
234; Anna Wood, 191, 235; 
Anne S., 359; Annie Leifrh, 
207; Anthony Martin, 190; 
Asa, 188; Asa Purnell, 238; 
Augusta Alice, 354; Augus- 
tine, 344; Dr. Augustine, 347; 
Austin, 357 ; IBartholomew 
(Barthelemy, Bartholomy), 
Immigrant from France, birth- 
place of, 92; officer on King's 
Guard, 93; marriage of, 94; 
retires from King's service, 
and protected by amnesty, 
95; association of, with Fon- 
taine, 99, 105; visits of 
Dragoons to home of, 109, 
118, 130; amnesty of King to, 
112; plans Fontaine's flight, 
117; visit of Priest to, 123; 
flight of, 129; death of, por- 
trayed, 134; emigrants to 
America, 137; entry of land 
by, 138; activity of, in the 
church, 139; date of death 
of, 140; sword of, 140; regis- 
ter of family of, 142; deeds 
of, 148, 150; will of, 155; 
children of , established, 170-2; 
ancestry of, 174-6; issue of, 
179; Bartholomew (descend- 
ants), 260, 342, 347, 347; Ben- 
jamin, 355, Benjamin F., 353; 
Benjamin Francis, 247 ; Benja- 
min Hunter, 207, 210; Rev. 
Benjamin Hunter. 207 ; Ben- 
jamin Rush, 354; Bertha, 193; 
Bessie, 249; Blanton Hugo, 
209; Carrie, 233; Catherine, 
355; Charles, 224; Charles 
Lewis Cooper, 191, 235; 
Charles Meredith, 393, 394; 
Rev. Charles Meredith, 392; 
Charlotte A., 193; Cicno, 396; 
Clarence Earl, 249; Clifford 
Hardman. 249; Cora A., 193; 
Cornelia T., 238; Daisy Lee, 
182; Daniel, 391, 392; David, 



395, 396, 396; Deborah, 396; 
De Graflfenreidt, 226; Duke 
Williams, 238; Earnest Rich- 
ard, 249; Ebenezer, 92, state- 
ment of, 167, 358; Edmond, 
180; Edmund Long, 347; Ed- 
ward Lawrence, 231, 236, 236; 
Edward Lorraine, 234; Ed- 
ward McFarlin, 211; Edwin 
Garland, 248; Elbert Newton, 
247; Dr. Elbert Stephenson, 
247; Eleanor, 394; Eliza, 180, 
180, 358; Eliza Ann. 193, 194, 
342; Eliza Bomar, 360; Eliza 
Lavalette,232; Elizabeth, 146; 
192, 261, 335, 352, 355, 395, 
395, 396, 396; Elizabeth Cath- 
erine. 190; Elizabeth G., 187, 
189; Elizabeth Guerrant, 189; 
Elizabeth H., 359; Elizabeth 
May, 211; Elizabeth Minter, 
355V Ella B., 234; Ella Nash, 
227; Elvira, 190, 235; Elvira 
May, 211; Elvira McFarlin, 
212 ; Emily, 355 ; Emily Howe, 
232; Emma W., 238; Essie 
Marie, 249; Esther, 247; Eva 
Crockette, 226; Eva Frances, 
246; Evaline, 192; Ferdinand, 
355; Flood Edmunds, 226; 
Flora M., 347; Florence Lu- 
cinda, 360; Florence Martha, 
247; Frances, 347; Frances 
Anderson, 185; Frances Ann, 
347; Frances Eliza, 214; 
Frances J., 237; Francis, 91; 
Francis Albert, 247 ; Francois, 
92, 142, 170; Frank Garland, 
247; Frank Sampson, 233; 
Fred., 360; Genevieve, 249; 
George A., 395 : George Mont- 
gomery, 234; George N., 395; 
George RufFm, 232, 232. 232; 
Gilles, 1st and 2d, 176; Hallie 
Daisy, 182; Harriet A., 192;- 
Harriet Amasia, 184; Plarry 
Clayton 248; Harry Wil- 
fred, 394; Helen, 247: Holm 
Bruce, 340; Henrietta, 193; 
Henrietta Cammilla, 210; 
210; Henrietta Ruth. 212; 
Henry, 184; Henrv Alexander, 
211; Henry Guerrant. 184. 211; 
Henry Hunter, 212; Henry 
Leigh, 207; Dr. Henry Rolfe, 
227; Henry Watkins, 236. 



406 



INDEX. 



Dupuy, Herbert, 394; Howard 
Eugene, 182; Howell Eldridge, 
227, 227; Hugh Palmore, 210; 
Hugo (Hugh, Hugues), Knight 
of Dauphiny, 88, 91; Hugues 
1st 174; 2d 175; Hulda Chinn, 
358; Isaac, 145, 190; James, 

•^47, 176, 479, -179, 194, 224, 
336, 345, 358, 358, 396; Capt. 
James, 181; Rev. James, 261; 
James Alva, 182; Judge James 
Asa, 236; James Barrett, 192; 
James Ethelbert, 182; James 
Henry, 188, 189, 238; James 
Lefevre, 188, 207; James 
Lindsay, 211; James M., 193; 
James Newton, 246; James 
Richard, 225; Judge James 
Robert, 359; Jane, 185, 193, 
355, 357, 358; Jane Guerrant, 
192; Jane Nicholas, 235; Jane 
R., 233; Jean, 176; Jean 
Jacqueline, 234 ; Jeremiah 
Minter, 354; Jesse, 183; Jesse 
G., 395; Jesse L., 193; Jessie, 
193; Jetta Gladys, 182; Joel, 
335; Joel Watkins, 227, 228; 
Dr. Joel Watkins, 185; John, 
146, 176, 185, 194, 335, 352, 
355, 355, 359, ,392, 392; Capt. 
John, 180; Dr. John, 92, 391, 
391; Rev. John, 92; letter of, 
163, 261; John Archer, 212; 
John Bartholomew, 143, 148, 
156, 179, 184, 207, 212; John 
Beverly, 224; John Booker, 
235; John Davis, 210; John 
Howell, 226; John James, will 
of, 157, 179, 238; Dr. John 
James, 233; John M., 193; 
Col. John M., 180, 183; John 
Purnell, 189; John W., 395; 
John Ware, 223; John Wat- 
kins, 207 ; John Wesley, 193 ; 
John William, 193, 211; Dr. 
Johnathan Ethelbert, 182; 
Joseph, 235, 337, 355, 394, 395, 
396, 396; Col. Joseph, 189, 
215, 218; Dr. Joseph, 346; 
Joseph Eggleston, 235; Joseph 
Fawcett, 354, 355; Joseph H., 
395; Joseph Lawrence, 182, 
210; Joseph Perry, 345, 347; 
Joseph Thomas, 188, 226; Dr. 
Joseph Thomas, 225; Joseph- 
ine, 227, 355; Josephine Ed- 



munds, 226; Judith, 145, 145, 
146, 180, 192, 335; Judith 
Coleman, 342; Julia Cecilia, 
353; Julia Elizabeth, 234; 
Julia Lorraine, 233; Kather- 
ine Ford, 226; Laura Adella;, 
182; Laura Josey, 182; Lava- 
lette, 234; Lawrence, 179; 
Lelia Katherine, 182; Lelia 
Morton, 210; Lemuel, 39^; 
Lemuel Wyatt, 359; Leonard 
Humphrey, 249; Leonard 
Johnston, 211; Leonella Cath- 
arine, 223; Lewis C, 193; 
Lewis Edward, 356; Lillia, 
193; Lily LeGrand, 212; Lin- 
naeus, 191; Lorena Belle, 182; 
Louis D., 193; Louis Rogers, 
223; Louisa, 234, 245; Louisa 
A., 193; Louisa Abbott, 191; 
Louisa Booker, 235; Louisa 
Margaret, 191 ; Loulie Rochet, 
236; Lucy, 355; Lucy Gor- 
don, 228; Lucy J., 346, 347; 
Lucy N., 194; Magdalene, 
180; Margaret, 193, 193; Mar- 
garet L.,238; Margaret Owen, 
347; Margarite Fowle, 232; 
Margiirite Eloise, 191; Mar- 
gueritte, 249; Maria, 396; 
Maria Louisa, 356; Maria 
Lucinda, 232; Marion, 247; 
Martha, 179, 245, 262, 336, 
351, 395, 395; Martha Belle 
Vedora, 182; Martha Branch, 
190; Martha Elizabeth, 221, 
225; Martha Turner, 342; 
Mary, 144, 146. 147, 180, 182, 
185, 194, 260, 395; Mary 
Anne, 356; Mary E., 192, 236; 
Mary Eliza, 354; Mary Eliza- 
beth, 212, 346; Mary Estella, 
248; Mary Evaline, 359; 
Mary Frances, 238; Mary 
Jane, 234, 246; Mary Janette, 
226; Mary Magdalene, 146, 
180; Mary Marshall, 234; 
Mary Mottley. 345; Mary 
(Polly), 353; Mary Purnell, 
188, 231, 236; Mary T., 395; 
Mary Townes, 235; Mary 
Walker, 225 ; Mary Ware, 222 ; 
Matilda, 182; Mildred D., 
343; Minnie P., 227; Minnie 
Tabitha, 182; Moses Fuqua, 
192; Nancy, 180,183,336,395. 



INDEX. 



407 



Dupuy, Nancy Katherine, 211; 
Nannie Cortkndt, 227; Nan- 
nie E., 225; Nannie Madison, 
226; Nannie Lefevre, 235; 
Napoleon, 358; Natha.niel B., 
358; Nelia Purnell, 235 ; New- 
ton, 192; Nicholas, 91; Olym- 
pia, 144, 259; Orpah, 193; 
Oscar O., 194; Paul Barthol- 
omew, 211; Paul Hicks, 193; 
Paulina Eldridge, 226; Paul- 
ina Pocahontas, 226; Peter, 
144, 179, 180, 192; Lieut. 
Peter, 181 ; Perry, 347 ; Philip, 
357; Philippa, 172, 179; Pierre, 
176; Pleasant, 395; Powhatan 
Eldridge, 226; Raphael, Gov- 
ernor of Languedoc and 
Dauphiny, 88, 174; Raymond, 
88; shield of, 90; Raymond 
F., 249; Raymond Herndon, 
226: Rebecca, 395; Rebecca 
Cook, 232; Reuben Ruffin, 
188; Rhodes, 358; Richard, 
193 ; Richard Dean, 247 ; Rich- 
ard Stephenson, 245; Richard 
Watkins, 236; Robert, 183; 
Robert Gay, 360; Robert Hun- 
ter, 211; Robert Joel, 224; 
Robert Leroy, 182; Rodolphe, 
88; Roland Thomas, 347; 
Rolfe Walton, 227; Romaine, 
88; Rose, 347; Rosswell, 249; 
Roy Ottis, 249; Sallie, 337, 
358; Sallie Betts, 212; Sam- 
uel, 352, 355; Samuel Edward, 
249; Samuel L., 193; Sarah, 
191, 392, 395; Sarah A., 193; 
Sarah Ann, 245; Sarah Hol- 
man, 183, 191; Sarah Louisa, 
235; Sarah Lyle, 237: Sidney 
Thompson, 232; Starke, 358; 
Rev. Starke, 357; Stephen, 
183; Stephen H., 193; Susan, 
183, 184, 193; Susan Payne, 
223; Susan Watkins, 224; 
Susanna, 145, 260, 335, 358, 
395, 395; Susanna Lavillon, 
210; Susie Madison, 226; 
Tabitha, 354; Thomas, 191, 
245, 246; Thomas J., 193; 
Thomas N., 395, 395; Thorn- 
ton D., 234; Dr. Trevanian 
Van, 248; Van A., 247; Vic- 
tor Newton, 247; Virgil, 249; 
Virginia, 194; Virginia A., 



193; Virginia Ann, 192; Vir- 
ginia C, 236; Walter, 193; 
Watkins, 184, 206; Rev. 
Whitefield, 358; William, 192, , 
193, 194, 245, 247-, 249, 355,^ 
358, 395, 396, 396; Capt. Wil- 
liam, 182 ; William Alexander, 
234; William C, 193; Dr. 
William Elijah, 223; William 
Hall, 238; William Hunt, 185, 
223; Dr. William Jones, 188; 
William M., 395; William 
Purnell, 232, 235. 

"Dupuy's Hymns," 357. 

Durkee, Alice, Henry, T. L., 267. 

Dutton, Allie, 212. 

Dy Kar, John, 143. 

Dykes, 277. 

Dylander, Mrs. Eleanor, Rev. 
•John, 391. 

Eades, Amanda L., Anne M., 
267; C. H., 268; Dr. Edwin S., 
267; George A., Joseph, Joseph 
L., Julia, Julia Paul, Malcom, 
Mary, Myrtle, Pansy, 268; 
Robert Oscar, 267; Sallie 
Henrietta, 268; W. H., Wil- 
liam, William Granville, 267. 

Eagle, William, William Henry, 
282. 

Earle, Augusta, 363; Caroline 
E., Clara, Eleanor, Fontaine 
P., Rev. Fontaine Richard, 
364; Henry Oscar, John Bay- 
lis, Kittie, Lucien, Luella, 
363; Maria, 364; Mary Jane, 
363-4; Portia, Samuel Baylis, 
Samuel W., Sarah, 363; Wood- 
son, 364. 

Earley, Alice E., 201; C. C, 
Charles, 340. 

Early, Rev. Marshall D., Mary, 
329. 

Easley, Anna, 195. 

Edmunds, Alice L., Ashby, 216; 
Belle, Claiborne, Elizabeth, 
Frances, 215; Henry, 185,215; 
Henry Edwin, Jane, 215; Jane 
Watkins, 217; Jennie, John 
Dupuy, John R., Lavalette, 
Lizzie Read, 216; Lottie, 
Mary, 215; Mary Dupuy, 189, 
215; Minnie A.,' 216; Nannie, 
215; Nannie W., 217; Nich- 
olas, 185, 215, 215, 218. 



408 



INDEX. 



Edmunds, Sallie, 215; Sallie E., 
216, 216; Samuel, Sterling, 
215; Susan, 217; Thomas, 185, 
215; Dr. Thomas, William, 
215. 

Edzard, Susan, 289. 

Eggleston, Alexander, Archi- 
bald, Arthur Dupuy, 240; 
Beverly Purnell, 239, 239, 
239; Carrie Lyle, 241; Cath- 
erine, 253; Cornelia A., 242; 
Daisy Daniel, 239; David 
Quinn, 239, 239; Edmond, 190; 
Elizabeth Carrington, 240; 
Elvira Dupuy, 239; Everard 
Francis, 253; Fannie Louisa, 
239; George Markham, 240; 
Henry Markham, 241; James 
Asa, James Fletcher, 239; 
Jane Segar, 251; John Booker, 
240, 240; John Morton, 239, 
239; John William, 239, 239, 
239; Joseph, 190, 253; Maj. 
Joseph, 251; Joseph Dupuy, 
240; Dr. Joseph Dupuy, 240; 
Judith, 253; Julia Howard, 
Kate Shore, 240; Leigh Ligon, 
Lelia Graeme, 239; Lucilla 
Margaret, 240; Lucy Morton, 
241; Lucy Nash, 239; Martha 
Elvira, 240: Martha Judith, 
253; Martha Lyle, 241; Mar- 
tha Rebekah, 240; Mary, 253; 
Mary C, 240; IMary Eliza- 
beth, 239; Mary Jane, 241; 
Mary Louisa, Mary Terhune, 
240;" Matthew Lyle, 241; 
Nannie C, Nannie Josephine, 
Nelia Purnell, 240; Richard 
Beverly, 241; Col. Richard 
Beverly, 190; Rev. Richard 
Beverly, 241 ; Robert Skelton, 
240; Sallie Meade, 253; Sam- 
uel Daniel, 239; W. T., 252; 
William, 190; William Archer, 
253; William Green, William 
Stokes, 240. 

Eidgenossen, 1. 

Eignots, 1. 

Eldridge, Paulina Pocahontas, 
186; Thomas, 187. 

Elkins, Adeline, 335. 

Elliott. Dr., 362. 

Ellis, Charles, Fannie A., Mar- 
garet K. (Nimmo), 255. 

Ellister, Frances, Robert, 391. 



EUy, Beverly, Caroline, Eliza, 
Rev. George W., Henry, Maria, 
Thomas, 351. 

English, Mattie, 286. 

Enright, Charles Fred., Mary 

( ), Michael, William Fair- 

leigh, 295. 

Epes, T. F., 232. 

Ervin, Laura L., 278. 

Evans, 194; Alexander, Alice, 
Annie, 353; Eleanor (Lane), 
394; Ferdinand, John, Lillian, 
Mary, 353; Owen, 394; Rob- 
ert, Susan, 353; Tabitha, 182; 
Thomas Edward, 321; Wil- 
liam, 353. 

Ewing, George, 266; George 
Washington, Lewis Root, 340; 
Mary, 298. 

"Exiles, The Huguenot," 194. 

Fackler, Carrie, Elizabeth, 
George, Laura, Marion, Mar- 
tha, Nancy, 330. 

Fairbanks, H. C, 339. 

Fairleigh, Andrew, James L. 
O'Neill, Jennie, Mary Logan, 
William, William G., 295. 

Farel, William, Reformer, 5; 
Beza's tribute to, 6; author 
of manifestoes, 19. 

Farrar, Robert, 363. 

Farnsworth, Minter Parker, 
Palmer, 279. 

Faulds, John Anderson, 223, 

Faulkner, Alexander C, 223; 
Alice, Bettie Lee, 329; Clara, 
224; Davis A., 329; Edgar 
Lee, 224; Ernest Lee, 329, 
329; Fannie Agnes, 223; Fleet 
C, Lee, 329; Marv Lula, 224; 
Nellie F.. 329; Dr. Richard 
B., 91; Richard C. Ruth, 
William Alexander, 224. 

Fawcett, Mary Anne, 352. 

Fawsett, Mary Greathouse, 353. 

Fee, George, 356. 

Felix, Jennie, Josephine, Mary, 
Mattie, Rev. William, 348. 

Fergusson, Agnes V., 1*^5, 206; 
Elizabeth Noel, Harriet Lou- 
isa, 206: Dr. James, 195; 
Mary Elethia, 205; Samuel 
James, 206; Rev. William 
Milner, 205. 

Field, Joseph, 357. 



INDEX. 



409 



Filley, Mary Elizabeth, Nancy, 
Oliver B., Oliver D., 368. 

Finley, Anna Lucy, Arthur 
White, Clifton Benjamin, 
Fannie Elizabeth, Hortense, 
John K., John Randolph, 300; 
Katie A., 211; Mary Eliza- 
beth, Mary Helen, Percy Blue, 
Percy Gregory, 300; Rev., 
284. 

Fisher, Clarissa, 279. 

Fitts, Agnes Morton, Benjamin, 
Carrie W., Harry, Col. Sand- 
ford, Sandford Brooks, 196. 

Fitzgerald, Charles W., 228. 

Fitzhugh, Mary, 241. 

Fleming, Col., 187 ; Maggie, 282. 

Fletcher, Gov. Thomas C, 293. 

Flex, Peace of, 57. 

Flora, Charity Cobbley, 294. 

Flournov, Ann Cabell, Ann 
Eliza,' Bessie B., Gertrude, 
Helen, Henry Cabell, Isabella 
Cabell, Kate, Mary, Melvin, 
Nicholas, Nicholas Edmunds, 
Dr. Patrick Henry, Patrick 
W., Walter N., Dr. William 
Stanhope, 217. 

Flowers, Sallie J., 279. 

Fogg. Benjamin, Dione, Eliza- 
beth, Joel, John, Joseph, 
Lucy, Mary, 335: 

Fontainbleau, Assembly at, 33; 
declaration of Louis XIII at, 
74. 

Fontaine, Rev. James, discus- 
sion of vrith Bouillon, 98; 
arrested and trial of, 101; at 
home of Dupuy, 105; flight 
of. 117, 120. 

Force. Jessie E., 276. 

Ford, Evelyn Asher, Ferdinand 
C, Kate "Morton, 213; Kath- 
erine, 226; Walter F., 213. 

Forestier, Jeannette, 116. 

Forrister. Edith, Ethel H., Fan- 
nie, Frank H., 288; Richard 
287. 

"Fortune, A new way to win a,' 
194. 

Foster, Edmund, 227; George 
.Tames, Mary, Susanna, 262. 

Fowler, J. W!, 282; Louise J. 
277. 

Francis, Duke of Guise and 
aspirant to throne, 30; pro 



posed the Inquisition, 32; ar- 
rested Conde, 34; caused con- 
flict at Vassy, 39; assassin- 
ated, 40. 

Francis I, King, influence of on 
the Reformation, 12; made no 
pretensions to religion, 13; 
interdicted influence of Mar- 
guerite, 16; incensed at man- 
ifestoes, 19; death of, 22. 

Francis 11, King, 30; death 
of, 34. 

Franke, Florence, Hallie, Harry, 
216. 

Franklin, Minnie Belle, Richard, 
Ora, 317. 

Franks, Mary Minter, R. H., 
280; Roberta L., 278, 280. 

Fray, Richard, 334. 

Friend, Benjamin C, 216. 

Fry, Edith, Henry, John, Mary 
W^ert, 351. 

Fuqua, 183; Gentry, Samuel 
Henry, AVarren, 315. 

Gaines, George, 316. 

Galigai, Leonora, executed, 72. 

Gallager, W. D., 351. 

Gant, Albert Minter, Dr. H. A., 
Richard Preston, 282. 

Garland, Cynthia, 245; Georgia 
(Jeter), 195; Nattie A. V., 
246. 

Garnett, 301; Thomas, 217; Col. 
William, 301. 

Garrison, Lorena, 247. 

Garthrite, Nancy, 363. 

Garvin, Alice, " Belle. James, 
John, Porterfield. Sallio, Sam- 
uel, Sinclare, William, 3G4. 

Gathrite, William. 365. 

Gaultny, Stella, 372. 

Gay, Dr. William, 187. 

Gavlord, Edith Pomeroy, Elsie 
Kilirour. Thos. Gould, 340. 

Gi'bhart, Sarah, 335. 

Germain-en-Laye, treaty of, 45. 

Gibbs, Dr. Charles H., 240; 
Charles Randolj)h, 241 ; Daniel 
Ferdinand, Ferdinand .Tack- 
son, 373; Mary Eggleston, 
241; Mary Louise, 373. 

Gill. Alice, Elizabeth, James, 
John. 276; Martlia Amelia, 
345; Pliilip, 275, 275; Sarah, 
276; William, 320. 



410 



INDEX. 



Gillette, Maude, 332. 

Gilliam, Adolplius H., Adolphus 
Howard, 214; Alice Sears, 
213; Carless, Clayton, Cleve- 
land, Cliff ton Dupuy, 214; 
Columbia Ann, Eugene Wil- 
liams, Evelyn Dupuy, 213; 
Freddie E., 214; Gertrude 
Bacon, 213; Glodys, Harry, 
214; Harry E., Henry Evan- 
der, Herbert Spencer, 213; 
Holly, Homer, 214; Leonard 
Statham, Mary Elizabeth, 
Mary Lavalette, Myrtle, 213; 
Nettie. 214; Otis Matthews, 
213; Pearl, Richard C, Rufus 
C.,214; Spencer, 212; Thomas 
Dupuy, 213 ; Virginia Frances, 
212; Walter, William A., 214. 

Gillies, Lula, 272. 

Gist, 351. 

Glascock, Anna Taylor, Asa, 
Henry Clay, Henry Stanley, 
Margaret Geneva, 315. 

Glasscock, 180; Bragg, Ethel 
Green, Laura, Ray E., Stella 
Gertrude, 308. 

Godfrey, of Bouillon, 88, 89, 175. 

Goffe, Anne, Aaron Goza, Charles 
Henry, Charles Nathan, Clara 
L., 356; John McGaw, Louisi- 
anna, 357; Dr. Nathan G., 
356; Ora Dupuy, Samuel Du- 
puy, Theodore Nathan, 357. 

Goldborough, Annie Brice, Brice 
Martin, Charles Nelson, Char- 
lotte Leah, Eliza Pettit, Hel- 
en Louise, J. Richard, Louise 
Magill, Mary Cornelia, Mary 
Elizabeth, Nina Christine, 
Richard, Sallie Rankin, Wil- 
liam Thomasson, Willie, 350. 

Gondey, Thomas, 366. 

Goode,"^ Delia, 328. 

Goodrich, Lucy, 237. 

Goodwin, Alliert F., Annie, 
Arthur, 282; Charles Albert, 
246; Clifford, 371; Ella Daisy, 
246; George B., John E., 
Lamira, 282; Louisa, 278,282; 
Margaret Blythe, 282; Maria 
Louisa. 246; Martha, Mary, 
Mary Anne, 282; Paul, 246; 
Robert B., 282; Sarah Jane, 
Thomas Dupuy, Thomas P., 
246; William W., 276, 282. 



Gordon, 285. 

Gough, Alexander Bailey, 223; 
Archibald Leonard, Chas, 
Spurgeon, 224; Daisy Anna, 
Ella Frolinger, 223; Fannie 
Faulkner, Jesse Nash, 224; 
Lula Cass, 223; Ruth, 224; 
William Dupuy, Rev. William 
Mason, 223. 

Gow, Emily, James, 269. 

Gower, Alexander G., Forestine 
R., 295. 

Goza, Aaron, Anna, 355; Ben- 
jamin Franklin, 356; Eliza, 
Elizabeth, Emma, Fay, 355; 
G. W., 356; George C, 
George W., 355; Georgie, 356; 
Henslee, James, Jamie, Louis, 
355; Louis D., 356; Mary, 
Maude, Picket, Samuel, Sam- 
uel Dupuy, 355. 

Graham, Claude Alexander, Doc 
Samuel, Ester Agnes, 314; 
Jamie May, John Robert, 
Neva Josephine, Robert, 313. 

Gray, Benjamin F., Benjamin 
Franklin, Cabell, 367; Flor- 
ence Price, 370; H. P., 319; 
Rev. Joseph R., Mary Rollins, 
370; Wastell, William Ash- 
ley, 367. 

Green, Col. Abram, 251; Armi- 
stead, 252; Eliza, 250; Rosa- 
lie, 252. 

Gregory, Allen M., Anthony 
Minter, 283; Bettie Stovall, 
Carrie, 284; Charles, 300; 
Chas. Edwin, 284; Chas. Hick- 
man, Claude, 300; Edgeworth, 
300, 301; Edgie, 300; Edwin, 
283; Elizabeth Gentry, 300; 
Fannie White, 301; Georgie, 
300; Hortense, 299; Ida Myr- 
tie, 284; James Allen, 299, 
300; John Hill. 300; Joseph, 
274; Joseph Blanchard, 301; 
Joseph E., 283; Joseph Min- 
ter, 277, 284, 284; Josephine, 
274; Lucy, 300; Lucy A., 283, 
283; Liicy Edmonia, 300; 
Lucy Norma, 301; Lou, 284; 
Martha L., Mary, Mary A., 
Mary Anna, 283; Mary Belle, 
284; Mary Ethel, 300; Mary 
Lucretia, 299; Mary Eliza- 
beth, Nancy S., 283; Olivia, 
273; Olivia M., Olive P., 283. 



INDEX. 



411 



Gregory, Paulina J., 283; Peter, 
270; Rov Allen, 300; Thomas 
E., 271, "283; Thos. Edmond- 
son, 329; Walter L., 284; 
William Garrison, 301. 

Grey, 335; Benjamin, Edmond, 
Eleanor, Richard, 335. 

Griffin, Lidia Jane, 358. 

Griffith, 339. 

Grimes, Mary, 266. 

Grimshaw, Edwin, Guy, Jona 
T., Lelia, Thomas T., 330, 

Gudzell, James R., 286. 

"Guest, The Mysterious," 194. 

Guerrant, Daniel, 142, 143, 147, 
179; Dora, 204; Esther, 146, 
179; Judith, 147; Magdalene, 
Peter, 146, 179. 

"Guilty? Was he," 194. 

Guise, Duke of (see Francis 
and Henry). 

Guises, Royal family, 30. 

Gunn, Sallie, 198. 

Gunnell, A. T., 266; Allen Ew- 
ing, Allen Thomson, Allen 
White, 332; Allie Marion, 
Alva Herndon, Clarence Smith, 
David Garfield, Evelyn, Hor- 
na. Ivy Kate, 333; John Tur- 
ley, 325; Kate Belle, 334; 
Margaret Elizabeth, 333; 
Marion Lucile, 334; Myrtle 
Boon, 333; Nancy, 329; Sed- 
die, 332; Thomas Allen, 331; 
Volney Clarence, 332; Volney 
Thomson, 333. 

Gunther, Ludolph Wilhelm, 
Maude Cecil, 258. 

Guthrie, Ann Augusta, James, 
285. 

Gwyank, Mary, 358. 

Hackney, G. Wilson, Lee, Lewis, 
Nancy, Theodore, William, 
357. 

Hairston, Eliza P., 204; George 
R., George Stovals, John Ty- 
ler. 203; Leatitia, 183; Louisa, 
203; Louise, 203, 204; Ma- 
tilda Martin, 203; Peter, 183; 
Peter Watkins, 203, 204; 
Samuel, 204. 

Halbert, Ada Ben, Alethia, Al- 
lie, Benjamin, Bessie, Charlie, 
Charles Query, Ermine, Er- 
mine H., 325; Isaac N., 324; 
Kisher, Leila, Lillian, 325; 



Martha W., 324; Mary C, 

Maude, Mildred, Nannie Clare, 

Olive Mary, Dr. Oliver Isaac, 

325. 
Haley, Joseph Willard, 301. 
Hall, 266, 298; Alice, 281; Dora 

J., 289; Elisabeth, 183; Ever- 
ett, 277; J., 281; John N., 

John Nesbitt, 281; Maria 

Sophia, 204; Minter, Nathan, 

Robert Lewis, 281. 
Ham, Hellen, 272. 
Hamacher, E. R., 371. 
Hamby, Edith Inize, Falcon Du- 

puy, Mabel Clair, Michael, 

Renick Dixon, Robert Lee, 

358. 
Hamlin, Clarence Clark, Clark 

Gunnell, Elizabeth, 332. 
Hancock, Elizabeth, 332, 351; 

John H., Lewis, Nannie, Nor- 
ton, 351; Gen. T. W., 332; 

Walker, 351. 
Handy, Benjamin, 274; Ellen, 

372*; George, 275; H. R., 272; 

John G., Martha Jane, 274; 

Mary Amner, Mary Eliza- 
beth, Mattie, Walter, 275; 

William, 274. 

Hanfon, Sadie, 338. "U oua>CSiav^A^ 

yHankins, James, 193. -^w-v^^^w^ 

Hardin, Adelia, 276; Benjamm, 

275; Charles, 275, 275; John, 

276; McGoffin, P. Walthus, 

Parker H., 275; Walter, 276. 
Harding, Edgar Temple, Ellen 

Temple, 351. 
Hardman, Virginia B., 249. 
Harking, i::Tiarles, Elizabeth, 

Richard, 272. 
Harlan, Sarah, 321. 
Harper, 307; Alice Willie, 221; 

Frances M., 214. 
Harrington, Nellie, 246. 
Harris, Mattie, 284. 
Harrison, Anne. 304; Edna, Ed- 
win, Emma, Esther, 359; 

Hulda Evaline, John W., 358 ; 

Julius, Lewis, 359; Mary F. 

E., Minnie V., 358; Pennie, 

359; William Q., 358. 
Harriss. J. W., Julia A., Julia 

Dorathy, 233. 
Hart, Stanhope S.. 216. 
Harv'ie, Courtney, Pattie, 252. 
Haskell, Alexander C, Rebecca 

Singleton, 257. 



412 



INDEX. 



Haskins, Betsy (Hill), 263, 264; 
Elizabeth, 263 ; Jane, Martha, 
Mary, 264; Mary Eichards, 
392; Col. Robert, 263, 264; 
Rev. Thomas, 392. 

Hatcher, Benjamin, 260; Charles 
Morehouse, 302; Cassius, 320; 
Edward Creel, Edward Tra- 
bue, Edwin, Elizabeth, George, 
Henry, James Berry, Jerry, 
Lucile, Martha Haskins, Mary 
Lelia, Mattie Haskins, Nancy, 
302; Robert, 301, 302; Sallie, 
Samuel Percell, Sewell, 302; 
Susanna, 260; William Rob- 
ert, 302. 

Hatton, 194. 

Hawkins, Mrs. Sarah (Strother),- 
290. 

Hawks, Margaret Major, Mary 
Ellen, Matthew Houston, 
Thomas Jefferson, 334. 

Hawthorne, Rebecca, 363. 

Hayden, Claude, Lester Brad- 
ley, 316. 

Haydon, Joseph, Mary, Mattie, 
Mattie Belle, Thomas, Thomas 
S., 348. 

Hays, Carrie, 287; Ida Myrtle, 
John M., Joseph Gregory, 284; 
Robert, 287. 

Hefley, Chas. S.. 223. 

Heiflev, Mary, 354. 

"Heiress. The Dethroned," 194. 

Heifer, Maggie A., 214. 

Helm, Augusta, George Alfred, 
285; Susan, 343; Dr. Wil- 
liam Duvall, 285 ; William S., 
343. 

Hemphill, David, 257. 

Henderson, Charles, 311; Mar- 
tha, 313; Seasil, 311. 

Henry, George J., 279, 279. 

Henry, son of Louis, Prince of 
Conde, Huguenot General, 44; 
forced to renounce Protest- 
antism, 50; leader of the 
Politiques and Huguenots, 
54 ; wages war, 58 ; commands 
Royal forces against the 
Queen Mother, 72. 

Henry, Duke of Guise, 58; as- 
sassinated, 59. 

Henry II, King, husband of 
Catherine De Medici, 22; en- 
couraged Reformation in 



Germany and persecuted Re- 
formers in France, 26; per- 
mitted Martyrdoms in Lyons, 
27 ; reproached Parliament 
for lukewarmness towards 
the established religion, 28; 
disgraceful peace of, with 
Spain, 29; death of, 30. 

Henry III, King, 54; head of 
Holy League, 55; humiliated 
by Guise, 57; orders Guise's 
assassination, 59; takes ref- 
uge with Henry of Na;varre, 
60; assassinated, 60. 

Henry, Prince of Navarre, joins 
Conde and Coligny at La 
Rochelle, 43; princely leader 
of Huguenots, 44; marriage 
of to Marguerite, 47 ; forced to 
renounce Protestantism, 50; 
arrested, 53; renounces Ro- 
man Catholicism, 54; heir to 
the Throne, 57; wages war, 
58; protects Henry III, 60; 
heroism of, 61; commander- 
in-chief and favored for 
Throne by the Politiques, 61; 
abjures Protestantism and is 
crowned, 

Henry IV, King, 62; his ab- 
juration insincere, 62; meets 
protestants in assembly at 
Monte, 63; issued the edict 
of Nantes, 63; distinguishes 
between the Huguenots^ ec- 
clesiastically and politically, 
65; admiration of, for the 
Huguenots, 66; assassination 
of, 66; Sully's opinion of his 
reign, 67. 

Henslee. John B., 355. 

Hernandies, Susie, 223. 

Herndon, Blanch L., 226. 

Herring, Dr. B. N., Benjamin 
G., Cathleen, Clemmie, Emily 
Stewart, Ermine Halbert, 
Hallie, Herbert Owen, Hodgen 
Elmore, Kathleen, Margery, 
327. 

Herrington, Clifton W., Walter, 
359. 

Heth,' Andrew T., 325; An- 
nie Artumea, Bettie May, 
Blanche, L«atitia, 326; John 
Willson, 325. 

Hewitt, Virgil, 345. 



INDEX. 



413 



Hickman, 358; Fannie, Harri- 
son, Joseph H., 301; Laura, 
369; Linwood, Louisa, 301; 
Mary Elizabeth, 301, 369; 
William, 363. 

Hicks, Sarah, 193. 

Hife, 272. 

Hill, Alta, 272; Christine P., 
350; Elizabeth. 299; John, 
319; Lenora A., 280; Lucy L., 
300. 

Hilliard, Edwin S., Isaac H., 
Isaac Henry, Mary Harde- 
man, 341. 

Hinkbey, Katie, 272. 

Hinton, Rebecca, 343. 

Hite, Laura A., 255 ; Mary, 284. 

Hobson, Bertie Virginia, 312; 
George William, 253; James, 
252; Mary Berneice, S. B., 
287. 

Hockaday, Eulalie, Irvine 0., 
Laura, Rollins Mills, 370. 

Hocker, Wesley, 275. 

Hodge, Emm.a,'^334. 

Hodgen, Alford, Anna, Bettie, 
Dora Pink, 287; Elizabeth 
Haskins, 286; Harriet N., 288; 
Isaac, 286, 287; Isaac N., 
James, 287; Dr. Joseph Du- 
puy, 288; Lucy E., 287; Mar- 
garet Trabue, 288; Mary, 
287; Mary E., 288; Mary 
Elizabeth, 287; Nancy, 288; 
Olivia, Phoebe, 287; Robert, 
286; Sallie L., Simmie Red- 
ford, 287 ; Trabue, Walter R., 
288; William T., 286; Wilson, 
287. 

Holladay, Alice Gordon Samp- 
son, Dupuy, Edwin Wilson, 
Jean Thompson, John Zack- 
ary, Lewis Littlepage, Mary 
Dupuy, 225. 

Holloway, Mary, 275; P., 351. 

Holman, Anna Mary, Emma 
Hall, 281; John H.,'280; John. 
L., John T., Louisa Minter, 
281; Nathan. 280, 281; Vir- 
ginia, 281; William Shields, 
280, 281. 

Holmes, David, 290. 

Holy League, 55, 57. 

Homes, Gilbert Clay, W. D., 316. 

Hopkins, Johanna, 335. 

Hord, C, 237; Louisa, 274. 



Horton, Florence Isabella, 347. 

Hostetter, Amy, David, 394. 

Hough, Alfred Fox, Charles F., 
Clarence Linden, 276; Ernest, 
George William, Harrison, 
Ida Bassett, James, Lillian, 
Lindsey Eades, Lucy Jane, 
Mary Elizabeth, Thomas, 277. 

House, 270; Zella T., 270. 

Houston, Charles, 331; Cynthia 
Bethel, Joseph C, 279; Laura, 
Noble, 331. 

How, Matilda, 193. 

Howard, Alfred Grattan, Anna 
Thorne, C. Elizabeth, Charles 
Langhorne, Cornelia Eggles- 
ton, Joseph Beverly, Mary 
Elvira, Paul Dupuy, 242. 

Howe, Emily, 188. 

Howell, Alfred E., Frances, 
Louise E., Martha, Morton 
B., 308. 

Howland, John Carver, 284; 
Sallie, 246; William E., 283, 
284; William Vernon, 284. 

Huddle, Hannah, 393. 

Hudson, Florence, 271; Richard, 
193. 

Huggins, Andrew, James, Lewis, 
Margaret, Sarah, Susan, Wil- 
liam, 292. 

Hughes, Elizabeth, 396; Sabina 
Linville, 372. 

Hughues, 2. 

Huguenots, origin of term, 1, 2 
when Reformers were so des 
ignated, 32; strength of, 38 
towns of, 45, 63; induced to 
attend nuptials in Paris, 46 
numbers of murdered. 51 
compact of with Politiques 
52; kneeling of before battle 
58; distinction of ecclesias 
tically and politically, 65 
leaders of, become divided, 
OS; prepare for war, 74; reply 
of Louis XIII to, 74; towns 
of, moved against, 74; down- 
fall of politically, 79; edu- 
cational center of, 79; down- 
fall of ecclesiastically, 81; 
sufTerings of, 81-84; numbers 
of, who refugeod from France, 
84; parts of Franco they 
were living in, at the time of 
the Revocation, 86. 



414 



INDEX. 



Huguon, 2. 

Humphrey, Gertrude C, 249. 

Hume, 301. 

Hundley, 180; Elizabeth, Quin- 
tus C, 180. 

Hunter, 337; Maj. Benjamin, 
184; Elizabeth, 368; Hen- 
rietta Louisa, 184; James 
Moss, Logan, Judge Logan, 
Mary Moss, 368; Miss (May), 
184; McGeheeDandridge, 369; 
Peter, 205; Thomas H., 368. 

Hurt, Prof. Ashley, 189. 

Hyler, Charles, Ernest Beamer, 
287. 

Inquisition, proposals of, 28, 32. 

Ires, Prof., 222. 

Ironmonger, Charles T., Mary 
Greyson, Nannie Cortlandt, 
227. 

Irvin, Lawrence, Lily, Mary, 
William, 364. 

Irvine, Sarah Cabell, 229; Wal- 
ter, 359. 

Irwin, John N., 349. 

Jackson, 180, 180; Annie Eliza, 
373: Edward, Esther, 180; 
Evelyn Carroll, 349; Hallie, 
372 ; Harriet Elizabeth, Harry 
Dupuy. 373; James, Joel, 180; 
John T., John Thomas, 373; 
Jordan, Lucretia, Magdalene, 
180; Marv L., 373; Mollie, 
211; Oily, Patience, 180; Rev. 
Shelby Andrew, Shelby Sher- 
wood, 373; William, 349. 

Jacobs, Jane, 286. 

James, Nannie, 194. 

January, edict of, 38. 

January. Maria, 363; Mary, 
362; "^ Mattie, Mollie, 363; 
Thomas A., 362. 

Jamac, battle at, 44. 

Jarnilloc, captain of Dragoons 
at the home of Dupuy in 
France, 110; wounded by Du- 
puy, 1 19 ; killed by Dupuy, 131. 

Jefferson, Maria, 319. 

Jeffress, Albert G., 235; M.E.,188. 

Jenkins, A. E., Emma Lee, 317; 
Mary, 367. 

Jennings. Sarah, 290. 

Jesuits, 66, 68. 

Jeter, John, 353; T., 188. 



John, James, Owen T., 334. 

Johns, Catherine, Charles, Em- 
ma, Frances Osborne, Joel, 
Mary Bruce, Taylor, William 
Creath, 189. 

Johnson, Capt. of the Ports- 
mouth, 117; Cave, 291; 
Charles, 310, 359; Eddie, 285; 
Fauntleroy, 291 ; Henry Boo- 
zier, Holly Eugene, Hulda 
Isabelle, 359; Jane, 286; 
John, 316; John Downing, 
272, 272; Julia J., 240; Mary 
B.. 268; Stella E., 316. 

Johnston, Abbie, C. Oscar, 267; 
Carter Dupuv. 227; Elmer, 
322; Florence L., 360; J. T., 
John T., 267; Rev. Lewis B., 
226; Lewis Dupuy, 227; Lil- 
lian, 322; Maggie, 267; 
Margaret Mary, 360; Mary 
Elizabeth, 322; Dr. Prentiss 
Dupuy, 227; Roy, 322; Rev. 
Rufus P., 286; William Du- 
puy, William T., 360. 

Jones, Agnes Morton, Benjamin, 
Benjamin Watkins, Carrie W., 
Charles, 196; Charlotte Fre- 
linghuvsen, 315; Cora, 318; 
Dabney, 303; Dorothy, 318; 
Emma Hayse, Eliza A., 196; 
Elizabeth Jane, 314; Frances 
Ann, 195; Harrison, 303; 
Henry Clay, 196, 314; Hum- 
phrey, 318; Irvine Townes, 
196;' James, 335; John A., 
334; John E., 195; Josephine, 
Leftwich, 196; Margaret Em- 
ily. Martha Agnes, 314; Mar- 
tha Smith, Mary Ellen, Ma- 
tilda, Nannie Townes, Nellie, 
Pauline, Ralph, Ruth, 196; 
Sallie Ann, 314; Sallie S., 
Susan Agnes, 196; Susan 
Ellen, 315; Susan Jane, 196; 
Taylor, 303; Thomas, 196; 
Thomas S., 195, 196: Thomas 
Smith, 196; William T., 318; 
Willie. 196. 

Josey, Blanche Adella, John Du- 
puy, John Russell, Mattie 
Lee, Rena Alberta, 182. 

July, edict of, 34. 

Kady, A., 310. 
Kaler, Boss, Roy, 214. 
Kaulback, Louisa, 280. 



INDEX. 



415 



Kayburn, Leony B., 311. 

Kean, Leonora Lavinia, Nellie 
Pocahontas, Otho Tecumseh, 
William C, 228. 

Keats, Alice, George, John, 346. 

Keatts," 196. 

Keith, James A., Nellie, Mary 
Kate, 246. 

Keithley, Henry Clay Bates, 
James T., Mary Alice, Ma- 
tilda Agnes, Phyanna, Vir- 
ginia Lee, 316. 

Kelly, Mary, 350. 

Kendrick, Elizabeth, 257. 

Kennon, 187. 

Kent, Pauline Evelyn, 202. 

Kevil, Adolphus Bascomb, Eliz- 
abeth, 373. 

Key, Annetta, Fannie, John F., 
Maggie, Mary E., Mattie A., 
Minter P., Walter, Welling- 
ton, 270. 

Kidd, 271. 

Kimberlin, I. J., 355. 

King, Amanda Frances, Archer, 
260; Austin A., 372; Eliza 
.Jane, 266; Florence, 326; 
Mary Ann, 266; Mary Belle, 
Nannie, 372; Susan M., 266. 

King William's Parish, 136, 137. 

Kinsey, Jessie. 360. 

Kisher, Lela, 325. 

Kitzmiller, Laura Trabue, Mil- 
ton, 321. 

Kline, Frances Pillow, Walter, 
279. 

Knight. Caroline C, 270; Car- 
ter Dupuy. 230; Emmit Car- 
ter, 231; Franklin D., 271; 
G L., 270; Grant L., Henry 
Hudson. 271; Jennie Wick- 
liflfe, 231; John H., 228; John 
Howell, 230; Joseph, 271; 
Robert P., Sallie E. (Carter), 
Col. William Carter, 230; 
William P., 270. 

Knights Hospitallers, 89. 

Kulluck, Emma, 312, 

Kusian, Prof. A. L., 189. 

La Charite, Huguenot town, 45. 

Lackey, Mana, 344. 

Lacy, Rev. J. Horace, 229; 
James Horace, Margaret Gra- 
ham, Moses Hoge, 230. 



La Force, commander in Beam 
and at Montauban, 73, 76. 

Lamar, Henry Howard, Nor- 
man, 242. 

Lamb, 363; Elizabeth Ashley, 
•Josiah, Samuel, 370. 

Lampton, Clarke S., Frank M., 
337. 

Landee. Dollie, Kllie, Richard 
M., 334. 

Landis, Benjamin, Jannette, 
296. 

Lane, Anne S., 283; Edward, 
Sir Thomas, 394; Wade F., 
346; William, 394. 

Langenour, Charles, Thomas 
Eugene, 288. 

La Prade, 364. 

La Rochelle, Huguenot strong- 
hold, 43, 45; Political As- 
sembly of Huguenots at, 74; 
city prepares for war, 78; 
siege and downfall of, 79. 

Latham, T. J., 299. 

Latimer, S. A., 303. 

Lattimore, Halbert S., John 
Lee, O. Shivers, Offa S., Oliver 
C, Robert Baker, William 
Buck, 325. 

Lavillon, Countess Susanna, 
marriage of, 94; flight of 
from France, 129; last record 
of, 140; issue of, 179. 

Law, Elizabeth, 322. 

Leach, Elizabeth, Otis D., 323. 

Leadford, Matilda, 316. 

Leelerc, John, 9; Martyrdom 
of, 10. 

Lee, 204; Anne B., 246; James, 
Sadie, 371. 

Leeper, Paul Dupuy, 352. 

Lefevre. James, First Reformer, 
5; letter of to Farel, 8; death 
of, 16; regrets of, in old age, 
17; Judith, 179. 

Leffler, Cornelia A., 223. 

Leftwich, Mary M., 196; Sallie, 
273. 

Le Grand, Lizzie Eleanor, 212. 

L'Hopital, Michael, Chancellor, 
advocated toleration towards 
Huguenots, .32; opened con- 
ference at Poissy, 35; resig- 
nation of Cliancollorship, 43. 

Lciirh. Rosa Belle. 207. 

Lemon, Olive, 272. 

Leonard, Charlotte, 349. 



416 



INDEX. 



Le Puy, 87. 

Lesdiguieres, General of Hugue- 
not forces, 74; won over and 
made general of Royal forces, 
74; made marshal, and death 
of, 77. 

Leslie, Helen, Jerry B., Lelia, 
Louisa, 307. 

Lester, Joseph, 298. 

Levilain, Anthony, 364; Eliza- 
beth, 146, 360; John, 143, 145, 
179, 360; Mary, 364; Marye, 
145, 360; Susanna, 179, 360; 
Susanne, 145. 

Lewellen, Adelia, Agnes, 310; 
Agnes L., 311; Agnes T., 
Araminter, Arty Bryan, 310; 
Benjamin Franklin, 313; Car- 
rie, Clarence Napoleon, 310; 
Clark B., 311; Cynthia Ann, 
312 ; Dennie B., Eddie Bryant, 
310; Edith Ann, 312; Edward 
Lee, Florence Pearl, 311; 
Flory C, 310; Dr. George Ed- 
ward, 311; Geo. Washington, 
313; Gertrude, 310; Irene, 
Jacob Edward, 313; Jacob 
White, 311; James D., James 
W., John Hosea, 310; John 
White, 303; John Willis, 
Josephine Quinn, 311; Josie 
Endora, 312; Lulie B., 310; 
Lulie Crews, 313; Mabel 
Ruth, 310; Marcus Earl, 312; 
Martha Agnes, 311; Martha 
Jane, 313; Martha Matilda- 
Josephine, 314; Mary Grace, 
312; Marv Jane, 310; Mary 
Sexsmith,' Maude Myrtle, 312; 
Miranda Louisa, 313; Nancy 
Jane, 311; Napoleon, 310, 310, 
311; Nellie May, Roily B., 
Roy, 310; Samuel Edward, 
313; Sarepta, Sarepta E., 
Stella, 310; Susan E., 312;/ 
Theodore C, Vallye, 311; 
William Claude, 312; Willis 
Napoleon, Zelda, 311. 

Lewis, 308, 352; B. P., 280; 
Caroline, 251; Charles D., 
Emily Davis, 280; John, 319; 
Joseph Minter, Lamira Jane, 
280; Louisa Susanna, 329; 
Martha Ann, 251; Mary, 250; 
Marv Louisa, 280; Pattison, 
281;"^ Dr. R. H., 280; Rachel, 
330: Robert H., 280; Roberta 



H., Rosa Eagle, 281; William 
Minter, 280. 

Ligon, 361; Edward F., 238; 
Fannie P., 239; George B., 
Myrtle B., 238. 

Lillie, Antoine Trabue, Charles, 
Chas. Lewellen, John William, 
Lonius Clay, 314. 

Linberger, A.^Todd, 324. 

Lindsay, Alice, Dr. Opie J., 301. 

Lindsey, 266; Josephine Eliza- 
beth, 276; Lucinda, 272. 

Lingle, Mary Sampson, Rev. 
Walter L., 233. 

Linley, Alice, Dr. Charles Hen- 
ry, Corinne, Louis Dupuy, 
Maria, Nona, Roy Gregory, 
301. 

Lithyon, Lizzie P., 337. 

Littlejohn, Peggy, 183. 

Llewellyn, Charles Trabue, Dor- 
othy Kulluck, 312. 

Lockett, Brittain, James, Joel, 
John, 260. 

Logan, Dr. Chas. Cotton, 293; 
David Croysdale, 294; Ed- 
ward Carter, 344; Emily, 294; 
Eva Viola, 344; Frank Pur- 
year, 294, 294; James, 293; 
Jane (Shannon), John, 292; 
John Luy, John Sublett, 294; 
Dr. John Sublett, 292; Louis 
Sublett, 294; Martha Cole- 
man, 345 ; Mary, Mary Louise, 
Milton Tootle, 294; Richard 
Clough Anderson, 345; Rob- 
ert Smith, 344 ; Sheridan, 294 ; 
Thomas, 292; Thos. Ashton, 
Thomas Trabue, 294; W. 
Hume, William Hume, 344. 

Long, 351. 

Longjumeau, treaty of, 42. 

Lorraine (See Charles, Car- 
dinal of). 

Lotspeich, Lottie C, 278. 

Louis, Prince of Conde and 
aspirant to throne, 30; pro- 
posed arms, 31; Huguenot 
general, 32; captured and 
released at Amboise, 32; ar- 
rested and pardoned, 34; 
imprisoned, 40; laid siege to 
Paris, 42; seizure of deter- 
mined on, 42, 43; assassin- 
ated, 44. 

Louis XII, King when Reforma- 



INDEX. 



417 



tion began in France, 5; 
death of, 12. 
.^r_.,^ Louis XIII, King, 67; majority 
of declared by Parliament, 
71; retained favorites at the 
Court, 71; marriage of, 71; 
makes Luynes Minister of 
State, 72; has favorites mur- 
dered, 72; imprisons his 
mother, 72; reply of, to Re- 
formed Synod, 72, 74; moved 
against Huguenot towns, 74, 
76; repulsed at Montauban, 
76; death of, 80. 

Louis XrV, King, 80; hard- 
ships of toward Huguenots, 
81-84; revoked the Edict of 
Nantes, 83; amnesty of to 
Dupuy, 112. 

"Love, All for," 194. 

Love, Henry, James, Jesse, 
Mary, William Thomasson, 
350. 

Lovelace, Anna, Bettie Peck, 
John Hugh, Martha, 339. 

Low, Florence Mary, 360. 

Lowry, Elizabeth, Jane, John, 
270. 

Lucas, Fannie, 288. 

Luke, Ethel Jean, Mary J., 275. 

Lustore, Edward, Perry, Tulla, 
323. 

Luther, Anne, 326. 

Luvnes (See Charles D'Albert). 

Lykens, Mary O^Neill, 294; 
'William Logan, 295; William 
Richardson, 294. 

Lvle, Mary, 240; Sarah Ann, 
■244. 

Lyng, Leo, P. J., 315. 

Lyons, martyrdoms at, 27. 

Macey, 364. 

Macfiill, Lizzie Royan, 243. 

MacGregor, Chastine, Matilda, 
Dr. Thomas A., 319. 

Machir, Henry, John, Maria, 
362. 

Mackey, Carrie, 289. 

Madison, Mollie, 225. 

Magee, 182. 

Mahn, Prof., 1, 2. 

Maintenon. Madame de, mis- 
tress of Louis XIV, 82. 

Major, Ada H., 274; Ada Hel- 
len, 284; Agnes, 274; Albert, 
330; Albert Minor, 331; Al- 



fred, 273; Allen G., 329; Alva 
Curtis, 331; Anna Maria 
Shipp, 334; Anna May, 331; 
Benjamin, 273, 273, 274, 335; 
Boone, 273; Catherine, 274; 
Chastine, 335; Earl E., Elea- 
nor, 274; Eliza, 335; Eliza- 
beth, 274, 330, 330; Elizabeth 
A., 334; Elizabeth Redd, 329; 
Emma, 273; Eugene, 335; 
Florence, 274; Frank, 273; 
George, 273,274,330; Georgia, 
273,274; Gregoi-y, 283; Hallie, 
273; Harriet, 274; Harry, 
273; Helen, Ida, 274; Irene, 
330; Isaac R., 273; J. Mc- 
Gaevey, 331 ; James, 269, 274, 
274; James Shipp, 335; Jane, 
274; John, 266, 274, 274, 331, 
335; John James, 329; John 
Milton, 335; John Thoma>s, 
330; Joseph, 273, 335; Joseph 
B., Joseph T., 274; Judith 
Ann, 334; Laban Shipp, 335; 
Laura, 331, 335; Laura Louisa, 
334; Lelia, 273; Lewis Allen, 
335; Lucien, Lucien S., 273; 
Lucien Scruggs, 283; Mar- 
garet, 330, 331, 335; Marie 
Su&anne, 283; Marv, 273, 274, 
274; Mary E., 273; Mary 
Temple, 331; Minor, 273, 331; 
Minor Wagner, 331; Nancy, 
Olive, 330; Olive Trabue, 329; 
Olivia, 331; Sallie, 273, 330; 
Sophia, 274; Susan Dupuy, 
283, 329; Susan (Trabue), 
statement of, 168; Susanna 
M., 273; Thomas, 265, 273, 
273, 330; Thomas G., 273; 
Thomas T., 330; Virgie, 
Weightman, 273 ; William, 
274," 330, 335; William H., 
273; William Horace, William 
T., 334; William Trabue, 335; 
Willie, 273. 

Malone, Elizabeth, 180. ' 

Manifestoes, 18. 

Manloy, Christine, 308. 

Mann," 293; John Andrew, 292; 
Martha, 179; William, Dr. 
William. 293. 

Marguerite, of Angotilene, char- 
acter of, 13, 14; poem of, 15; 
kindness of to Lefevre, 16; 
concessions demanded by, 16; 
influence of interdicted, 16. 



418 



INDEX. 



Marmaduke, Gov. John S., 293. 

Marot, Clement, 25. 

"Marriage, The clandestine," 194. 

"Marry her? Why did he," 194. 

Marshall, 323; B. T., 303; Fan- 
nie, 364; John Dupuy, John 
H., 234; Joseph H., 293; Wil- 
liam Montgomery, 234. 

Martin, Angle, 288; Anna Du- 
puy, Carrie Payne, 197; 
Catherine, 199; Eliza Davis, 
203; Elizabeth, 193; Emma, 
Dupuy, 199; Florence Wat- 
kins, 197; George, Maj. George 
W., 199; James, 197, 203; 
James Ed., 223; Jane, 197; 
John H., Joseph Benjamin, 
199; Mag. Watkins, 203; 
Margaret, 181; Mary Wil- 
liams, Sarah Roberta, 197; 
Susan G., Thomas Henry, 
199; Wesley M., William 
Richardson, 223; William 
Watkins. 199. 

Marty, J. G., 289. 

Mary De Medici, wife of Henry 
IV, and Regent, 66; dis- 
charged Sully, 67; sent edict 
to the Reformed Synod, 69; 
negotiated marriages, 70; im- 
prisonment and escaped, 72; 
reconciliation with King ef- 
fected, 72. 

Mason, Temperance, 272. 

Matson, Margaret, Peter, 391. 

Matthews, Prof., 361 ; Gertrude, 
Jessie, 362. 

Maulins, Thirteen Parliaments 
convened at, 41. 

Maxwell, 358. 

Mayo, Josephine, 231. 

Mazarin, Minister of State, 80; 
breaks ecclesiastical bond oif 
Reformers, 81 ; death of, 81. 

Mazurier, 17. 

McAlister, John 0., 286. 

McArthur, Bruce, H. T., 283. 

McAulay, John, Mary Louise, 
Robbie Stanback, 242. 

McCance, Fenelon, Frank, Gor- 
don Trabue, Hugh, Robert, 
321. 

McCarton, Ann P., Thomas, 366. 

McCarty, Amanda, 274. 

McClellan, Elizabeth, 361. 

McClure, Abraham, Abram, Ach- 
sah, Alexander, 336; Rev. 



Alex. Doak, 338; Bartlett, 
336; Elizabeth Lyle, 339; 
Mary, 336; Robert Edwin, 
339; Samuel, William, 336. 

McCune, Elizabeth, Henry Har- 
rison, 368; Jennie Moss, 368, 
369; John Shannon, 368; 
Ruth, 368, 370; Ruth Anne 
(Glasby), Sallie, 368. 

McDonald, Brite, Elizabeth 
Sherley, 340; Forestine Cav- 
alier, 295; Sarah, William, 
294; William A. P., 295. 

McDowell, Elizabeth, 319. 

McElroy, Hugh L., 275. 

McFerren, James C, 349; Lula, 
Mary, Nellie, Rosa, Samuel, 
287. 

McGarbin, Lula A., 313. 

McGavock, Rose, 368. 

McGee, 283. 

McGehee, Erastus Alex., 212. 

McGill, Charles W., 319. 

McGoffin, Bariah, Ebb, Elijah, 
George, 330; Jennie, 275; 
Russell, 330. 

McGuidev, Sarah, 267. 

McKee, Elmore E., 193. 

McKinlev, Chief Justice, 367; 
Andrew, 367, 367, 368; Anna, 
Ashly, 367; Crittenden, 368; 
Eleanor Wilcox, Elizabeth, 
Elizabeth Armstead, John, 
Julia, 367; Mary, 368; Mary 
Theresa, 367; Silas, 368; Wil- 
liam Kennett, 367. 

McKinney, Charles Eugene, 
Charles Lyle, Ellen Dupuy, 
244; Florence L., 223; Helen 
Le Vert, 244; Henry Upshire, 
Howard, 223; Kate Dupuy, 
Lelia Bland, Lennaeus Bar- 
rett, Maggie Belle, Margaret 
Logan, 244; Maria (— ),"281; 
Martha Louisa, 243; Mary 
Sue, 223; Peter Dupuy, 243; 
Ro Lennaeus, 244; Robt. Jen- 
nings, 243; Robt. Martin, 
Sarah Jane, 244; Thomas, 
192; Thomas Hampden, 244; 
William, 190; William Bar- 
rett, 244; William Richard- 
son, 223. 

McKinsey, Annie W., Benjamin 
F., Carrie Price, Millard F., 
199. 



INDEX. 



419 



McLeod, Rev. Kenneth A., Lelia 
Marguerite, Mamie Little, 
William Shore, 242. 

McMinomy, Hattie, 274. 

McMullen, Rebecca, 299. 

McMurry, Rev. John A., 216. 

Meadows, Flora E., 212. 

Means, Annie, B. V., Edith, 268. 

Mears, Charles D., Robert Mad- 
ison, 226. 

Meaux, Colony at, 17; martyr- 
doms at, 22. 

Mebane, Alice Earley, 201; 
Anne Dupuy, 200; Rev. Ben- 
jamin Watkins, Caroline Nel- 
son, David Cnmmins, 201 ; 
Drs. David Cummins, 200, 
201; Elizabeth Kent, Helen 
Watkins, Jennie Dupuy, 202; 
Jessie, 201; Margaret Archer, 
202; Mary Ellen, 200; Mary 
Galloway, Ramsey, 201 ; Rob- 
ert Lee, 202; Susan Agnes, 
Thomas, Dr. William Carter, 
201 ; William Nelson, Rev. 
William Nelson, 202. 

'^Meeting House, Dupuy's," 261. 

Mellard, Cynthia, 182. 

Menefer, George, 317. 

Meredith, Cha'i-les, Mary, 392. 

Merry weather, Martha," 320. 

Michaux, Abraham, 228. 229; 
Amanda, Anne, Elizabeth, Es- 
ther, Jacob, 229; Jane, 228; 
John, Joseph, Judith, Mag- 
dalene, Susanne. 229. 

Michie. Cornelia Virginia, 244. 

Middleton, America, 353; Ar- 
thur Hagen, 341; Belle, 352; 
Charles Gibson, 341 ; Horatio, 
353; John, 341, 353. 353; John 
Summers, 341; Lillian, 352; 
Louella, 353; Martha, 349; 
Marv. 352. 353; Mvrtle, 353; 
Robert, 352; Walter, 352; 
William, 352, 352, 353. 

Miller, Dr. C, 280; Maude M., 
219; Sarah, 363. 

Minor, Amacy Webb, 225; 
Charles Carter, Frank Hugh, 
257; Lavinia,270; Peter Carr, 
257. 

Minter, 269; Ann M., 271; Anna 
S., 270; Anthony, Benjamin, 
271; Benjamin Franklin, 270; 
Bertholde, 272; Caroline, 271 ; 
Eliza J., 282; Elizabeth, 261, 



269; Ellen, 272; Eugenia C, 
George, Henrietta, 270; James, 

269. 271; James T., 270; 
Jane, 269, 270; Jeptha, 270; 
Jeremiah A., John, 271; John 
Mills, John Trabue,' 270; 
Joseph, 270", 271; Rev. Joseph, 
Joseph Anthony, 262; Judith, 
269; Lamira A., 278; Leon- 
idas, 270; Louisa H., 282; 
Magdalene, 271 ; Margaret, 
270; Marshall, 272; Martha, 
Martha Ann, 270; Martha J., 
277; Mary, 281; Mary S., 
271; Nancy, 269; Percy, 270; 
Rosa, 282; Sarah, 269, 270; 
Sarah A., 280; Sarah Jane, 
Susan, 272; Tabitha, 271; 
Thomas S., 270; William, 270, 

270, 271; William Garnett, 
281. 

Mintfee, Ardinger, Dorothy, 
Gussie, B. C, 371. 

Mitchell, Geo. Patterson, Wil- 
liam B., 298. 

Mitchie. William Watson, 192. 

Mitts, Herman, 317. 

Mizner, J. S., John S., 271. 

Mohon, Catherine, G. B., 274; 
Harriet, 273. 

Moncontour, battle at, 44. 

Montauban, Huguenot town, 45; 
siege of, 76. 

Monte, Huguenot assembly at, 
63. 

Montpelier, treaty of, 77. 

Moore, Annie. 281; E. B., Col. 
E. C, 368; F. B., 313; How- 
ard, 289; Hugh, 315; Irene 
Louisa, 313; 'john T., 289, 
289, 289; Julia. 268; Larrie, 
310; Lillian Frances, 289; 
Linn. 315; Maggie Mav, 315; 
Martha, 364; Mary, 275, 296; 
Robert W.. 289; Rory, 315; 
Samuel, 268; TliomasG., 281; 
Thomas T., 315. 

Mooreman, Samuel, 196. 

Morehouse, Charles G., Robert 
Jay, 302. 

Moreri, Louis, French historian, 
87. 

Morgan, Thomas, 363. 

Mornay, Du Plessis, laid griev- 
ances of Huguenots before 
States-general. 71 ; deceived 
by Louis XIII, 75. 



420 



INDEX. 



Morrell, Angeline, 340. 

Morris, 267; Dabney, 188; OUie, 
350. 

Morrison, Bessie, 319; Kate, 
296. 

"Morton," 194. 

Morton, Catherine, 292; Charles 
Francis, Dr. Charles S., 213; 
Davis, 216; Edwin, 215; Elsie 
Venner, 214; Emma Belle, 
216; Evangeline, 214; Fan- 
nie, 215; Henry Wilson, 214; 
James Rawlings, 213; James 
Raymond, 200, 200, 200; John 
Taylor, 214; Joseph, Lava- 
lette, Lizzie, 216; Lottie, 215; 
Louise Minor, 200; Lucy, 
215; Lucy Nash, 239; Mar- 
shall, 213; Mary Evelyn, 
Robert Finley, 214; Samuel, 
215, 215, 216; William Gil- 
liam, 214. 

Mosby, Anne, 251. 

Moss, C. W., 353; Elizabeth, 
365; Maj. Hugh, 362; James, 
368; James Hugh, 369, 369; 
Dr. James Hugh, 361, 368; 
Dr. James Wynne, Jane 
(Ford), 362; Laura, 368; 
Mary, 369 ; Mary Jane, Oliver 
Perry, 368; Ruth, Sarah, Dr. 
Warren Woodson. 369 ; Wood- 
son, Dr. Woodson, 368. 

Mott, Dr. Henry Y., Susan, 201. 

Mottley, Mary, 260. 

Mouillere, discussion of, with 
Fontaine, 98; murder of, 115. 

Moultray, John, 353. 

Mowbray, John De, 189. 

Mudd, Susan, 193. 

Muir, Bettie Lee, Theodore G., 
Virginius E.. 328. 

Mullins, 203; Judith, 307. 

Munford, Emmit, 364. 

Murrah, Lillian, 289. 

Murray, Catherine, 253; James, 
187." 

Mustain, Anne, Bulah, Charles, 
Hodgen, Jesse, Lula, Lutie, 
McClellan, T. H., William, 
287. 

Myer, Lily, 289. 

Nantes, conference of Reform- 
ers at, 32; edict of, 63; rati- 
fications of edict of, 68, 71, 
79, 80; constructions of edict 



of, 69; revocation of edict 
of, 83. 

Nash, Cynthia J., 353. 

Naucke, Theresa, 367. 

Navarre, King of (See An- 
toine) ; Princes of (See D' Al- 
bert and Henry). 

Negrepelisse, population of, 
killed, 76. 

Neighbor, Elizabeth B., 347. 

Nelson, Annie, Benjamin, Wil- 
liam, 269. 

Nemours, edict of, 57. 

Nesbit, Eliza, Judge George, 
Marian, Milus, Dr. Milus 
Cooper, 318. 

Neville, Lidia, 304. 

Newcomb, Katherine, 299. 

Newman, 271. 

Newton, Maria, 358. 

Nichols, Rebecca, 395. 

Nikell, Elizabeth, 323. 

Nimes, Huguenot town, 52. 

Norton, Caldwell, Ernest, James, 
Minnie, 285; Nina, 350. 

Oakes, Albert, Alice, George, 
Travis, 195. 

Gates, Susan, 291. 

O'Bryan, Agnes Trabue, George 
G., 308; Lucinda, 309. 

O'Ferrall, Col. Charles T., 231. 

Offutt, Manly Dupuy, 336; 
Susan A., Z. F., 339. 

Old, William, 253. 

Odham, Dorothy, 349; John B., 
304; Martha W., Dr. Samuel, 
349. 

O'Neill, Adelaide Clara, 292; 
Alice, Catherine, 295; Charles 
Terrence, Clara Maria, Frank 
Owen, James Falls, 292; 
James L., 295, 297; John 
Bruce, 292; John Falls, 291; 
Kyron, 295; Louis Josephine, 
292; Mary Frances, 291 ; Rich- 
ard, 292; Sarah Ann, 291; 
Susan, 297; Terrance, 291; 
Theresa C, Thomas Tyrone, 
292; Virginia, 296; William 
Sublett, 292. 

Opel, Louise, 306. 

Osborne, B., 189; Catherine, 
189. 

Otwell, Elizabeth, 328. 

Outhouse, Ludy, 395. 



INDEX. 



421 



Overall, Adele, Florence Rollins, 
James Rollins, John Henry, 
Judge John Henry, Sidney 
Rollins, 370. 

Ow, Martha, 267. 

Owen, Abram, 337 ; Col. Abram, 
336; Clarke Lewis. 337 ; Eliza- 
beth, 338; Frank, Harriet, 
James D., James Dupuy, 
Jane, Laura, 337; Lucy Woo- 
ten, 338; Martha, 337; Nan- 
cy, 338; Susan, 339. 

Owens, 270; Alethia, 353; Anne, 
270; Catherine, 270, 353; 
Carron, Elias, 310; Eliza- 
beth, 352; Florence, 353; 
Frank, 310; George Hunt, 
353; John, 352; Lizzie, Lucy, 
353; Mary Jane, 310; Minnie 
Lethia, Quida, Robert, Rev. 
Robert, 353; Robert L., 352; 
Rosetta, 323; William, 353; 
William Taylor, 310. 

Owsley, Mary, 338. 

Palmore, F. D., Kitlie, 209. 

Paris, Reformation begins in, 
5; procession in, 20; martyr- 
doms in, 21 ; First Reformed 
Cliurch, organized in, 28; 
First National Synod organ- 
ized in, 29; Massacre of St. 
Bartholomew's Day in, 49. 

Parker, Ada, 280; Arthur, 279. 
279; Cynthia Jean, Fannie 
Pillow, 279; Farrar Burr, 
280; Frank Sim, 279; Heber 
Jones, 280; James, 363; Je- 
rome Pillow, 279; John Burr, 
Julia, Lamira, Lamira Mintor, 
280; Louisa, Louisa Ray, 279; 
Louise Kay, 280; Margaret, 
363; Martha Ann, Mary 
Bethel, Mary Fowler, Mary 
Houston, Minter, 279; Robert 
A., 278, 279, 279; Susan 
Elizabeth, Thomas J., 278; 
Walter Lowry, 280, 280; Wil- 
liam Garnett, 279, 279. 

Parkhill, Kate, 253. 

Parks. Martha Augusta, 321; 
Mattie, 229. 

Parliament, rights delegated to, 
33; opposes move of Louis 
XIII against Huguenot towns, 
73; amended Church and 
State separation law, 85. 



Parsons, James, James Brown, 
Sarah C. (Peddicord), 210. 

Partlow, Jennie, 193. 

Pasquier, Etienne, 2. 

Patterson, Anne, George, Holmes, 
John, 298; John Hamilton, 
192; Oliver G., Robert, Reu- 
ben, 298; Sallie Duncan, 306; 
Thomas, 298. 

Patton, Anna, Clemmie, James, 
Rev. James Godfrey, 327; 
Marv, 294. 

Paul, Clara, 246. 

Paxton, Lucy Ann, 199; Mary, 
298. 

Payne, Rev. Charles Montgom- 
ery. 197; Ella, 286; J. J., 196; 
Mary Augusta, Roberta Lee, 
198; Saliie S., Thomas J., 
William Anderson, 196. 

Peace, Philip P., 286. 

Pearee, 263. 

Peay, Nancy, 337. 

Peck, John G., 337. 

Peers, Dolly, 363; John Val- 
entine, Katherine, Marjorie 
Kenneth, Valentine, 237. 

Pendleton, Joanna, 343. 

Penix, 297. 

Pergerson, 228. 

Perham, 266. 

Ferine, Daro, 321. 

Perkins, G. D., George, Henrv 
W., Robert D., 281. 

Perkinson, Edward Bland, Janie 
Elizabeth, Thomas, Thomas 
Riindolph, 242. 

Persecutions, beginning of, 18. 

Peters, Charles, Isaac, John 
Egbert, Lawrence, Mary La- 
tham, 299. 

Petty, Eliza, 320. 

Peyton, Bernard, Champ Car- 
ter, Charles Ciirter, 257; 
Frank L., 356; Imogene, 257; 
Jennie, 309; Julia Amanda, 
Mary Carter, Moses Green, 
257. 

Phelps, Henrietta, 299. 

Philips, 276. 

Picket, Mary, 355. 

Pidcock, Roxanna Farr, 331. 

Piieher, Capt. M. B., 284; T. J., 
270. 

Pillow, Fannie. 279. 

Pinchback, 365. 

Piper, Charles E., 284. 



422 



INDEX. 



Pittman, Angeline, 271, 283; 
Anna Asa, 306, 343; Anne 
Belle, 304; A&a, 302, 306; 
Benjamin, Charles T., Cora, 
306; Edward, Edward Fran- 
cis, 304; Elizabeth, 306; Eva, 
271; George H., Geo. Harri- 
son, 304; Geo. Trabue, 306; 
Ida May, James Harrison, 
304; Jefferson J., 306; Katie, 
304; L., 317; Marie, 306, 306; 
Martha Jane, 304; Martha 
Walker, 306; Mary, 304; 
Nannie, Trabue, Velona, Wil- 
liam Daviess, 306; William 
H., 271; Williamson Haskins, 
306, 306. 

Pitts, Rev. S., 284. 

Plantagenit, Lady Margaret, 
189. 

Plummer, Elisha, John Wat- 
kins, 202. 

Pocahontas, 186. 

Poitiers, siege of, 53. 

Poissy, conference at, 35. 

Politiques, 52. 

Polk, Caroline, 341. 

Porter, Eliza Frances, 277; 
Jane E., Robert, 262; Ve, 268; 
William, 285. 

Posey, Eliza D., 224. 

Posterity, the honorable, 377; 
distribution of in United 
States, 378; enlistment of, in 
wars, 380; social standing of, 
381; education of, 381; relig- 
ious denominations of, 382-3; 
heritage of, 383 ; duty of, 388. 

Potts, Martha, 392. 

Pourtigot, 126. 

Powell, Bessie Wallace, Geo. 
Webb, John Munford Greg- 
ory, John Wallace, 255; Lydia 
A., 198; Mary Archer, Thomas 
Wallace, William Price, 255. 

Prater, James Gaines, Mary 
Gaines (Lee), W. H., 210. 

Presley, Samuel, 359. 

Price, Elizabeth, 301. 

Pritchet, Fannie, 311; Katie, 
310. 

Progenitors, of American Du- 
puys, 91. 

Pryon, 341; Joanna, 342; Sam- 
uel Morton, 343; William S., 
342. 



Pryor, Mattie, 214. 
Psalms, versified, 26. 
Pullam, 266. 

Pulliam, Rev. Thomas, 395. 
Purnell, Mary, William, 181. 
Puryear, William, 293. 
Putnam, Ada O., 322. 
Puy de Dome, 87. 

Radford, Benjamin Lawrence, 
Mary Charles, Robert Mor- 
ton, Reuben Lee, Sarah Ag- 
nes, William Dupuy, 224. 

Ragsdale, Charles, Isla G., Lula, 
196. 

Rainey, Ada, 281 ; Addie Oat- 
man, 282; Carrie Divine, Ew- 
ing Irving, Garnett Ethel, 
George, 281; Horace, 282,282; 
Isaac Nelson, Jesee, Jesse G., 
Joseph Minter, 281; Margaret 
Wells, Mary Lou, Mary Min- 
ter, 282; Robert Minter, 281; 
Sallie, Walter, 282; Walter 
Moore, 281; William Fleming, 
282; William Garnett, 281; 
Winfield Scott, 281, 282. 

Rambo, Catherine, 391. 

Ramsay, E. M., Ellen, 201; 
Franklin Pierce, Rev. Frank- 
lin Pierce, 200; John, Lola, 
Nellie, 201 ; Robert Lee, 200. 

Ramsdell, R. H., 246. 

Ramsey, 290. 

Randolph, John, 181; Richard, 
187. 

Rankin, 349; Bertie, John, 
Marv, William Thomasson, 
349.' 

Ransom, Luther, Mary Egglea- 
ton, Ronald Augustine, 254. 

Raredon, Chrissie Anthony, 317; 
Nannie, Nora J., 318; Thomas, 
317. 

Ratcliffe, A. G., 355. 

Ratecliffe, Allen, Anna, Samuel, 
Willie, 193. 

Ravaillac, assassin of Henry IV, 
66. 

Rayonnet, Servant, 129. 

Read, Mary N., 216. 

Redd, Asa Washington, Emily 
Watkins, George W., Geo. 
Washington, 236; Jesse, 363; 
John Fennell, William Dupuy, 
236. 

Reddy, Sarah Jane, 360. 



INDEX. 



423 



Reeg, Arthur, George P., 193. 

Eeeves, Houston, Lucy, Marion, 
Owen, Judge Owen T., Wil- 
liam, 334. 

Renata, Reformer, character of, 
23. 

Revocation, of edict of Nantes, 
83. 

Reynolds, Abigail, 288; Alice 
A., Anthony T., Charles T., 
309; Eleanor (Evans), Ellen 
Maria, 303; George T., Jane 
T., 309; Rev. John, 393; John 
H., Martha T., Mary, William 
H., 309. 

Rhodes, Docia, Haskins, 324; 
Miles, 323. 

Rice, Carleen, 286; L., 363. 

Richards, Amy Ruth, 322 ; Eliz- 
abeth, Jesse, William, 392. 

Richardson, 358; Agnes Ware, 
222; Ann, 394; Annie Eliza, 
223; Belle, 222; Charles Du- 
puy, 223; Fontaine Richard, 
I. A., 364; Jennie Lee, 223; 
John Earle, 364; Josephine 
A., Loulie, 223; Nathaniel, 
358; Pattie, 254; Judge Sam- 
uel, 394; William Harrison, 
222. 

Richelieu, advisor of Catherine, 
73; Cardinal and Minister of 
State, 77; contemplated ex- 
termination of Huguenots, 
78; captured La Rochelle, 79; 
death of, 80. 

Ricketts, Agnes M., 308. 

Ridge. Sarah, 273. 

Ridgely, Benjamin H., Louise 
B., 340. 

Riggs, R. B.. 245. 

Rino-o, Martha ,290. 

Ritchey, William H., 283. 

Ritchie, 293. 

Ritter, Caroline E., 287. 

Robbins, J. L., 270. 

Roberts, Elizabeth, 352; Eliza- 
beth Ann, James, 339; Mar- 
tha, 341; R. H., 216; Sarah 
Ann, 339. 

Robertson, A^nes T., 308; An- 
nie Belle. 220; Christine M., 
308; Fannie, 220; Kittie R., 
308; Lelia Eggleston, ' 239 ; 
Lucile, 308; Nicholas Hill, 
Rev. Nicholas Hill, 220; Paul, 
239; W. G., 308; W. H., 371; 



Walter Harris, 239, 239; Wil- 
liam G., 308; William Walker, 
220. 

Robinson, Ella (Parker) , 296. 

Rochester, Anne Caldwell, 
Charles C, George Alfred, 
Junius, Leatitia Lee, Percy 
Winston, Richmond, William 
Isaac, 286. 

Pochette, Susannah, 228. 

Rodman, Hallie, 349; Hettie, 
James, Dr. James, Martha, 
348; Mary, 349; Thomas, 348, 
349. 

Rogers, 301 ; Benjamin Trabue, 
Edmund L., 307; Jerusha P., 
224; John, Joseph U., Lelia, 
307; Mary, 320; Sallie Kirtly, 
372; Waiter, 334. 

Rohan, Duke, Huguenot general, 
75, 78; defended Montpelier, 
77. 

Rolfe, John, 186; Thomas, 187. 

Rollins, Clarkson, 370; Curtis 
Burman, 368, 370, 370; Ed- 
ward Tutt, 370; Eulalie Bow- 
man, 369; Florence, Frank 
Blair, 370; George Bingham, 
369; Hamilton Bowman, 368, 
369, 309; Harry, 370; James 
Hickman, 369', 369, 369; 
James Sidney, 370; Jennie 
McCune, 369"; Laura Hick- 
man, Marcraret, Mary E. 
Hickman, 370; Mary Hick- 
man, Robert, 369; Ruth, 
Sallie Rhodes, 370; Sallie 
(Rhodes), Sidney, 369. 

Romorantin, edict of, 33. 

Ronald, Anne Waller, Catherine 
Winston, 250. 

Rooker, Annie Laurie, 207. 

Rookey, Sarah Ann, 368. 

Ross, 358; Bertha, Carle, Clar- 
ence, 318; Ellen, 396; Ida, 
328; Irene Blanche, Simeon, 
Simeon Milan, 318; Capt. 
William, 396. 

Rouen, Huguenot town, 40. 

Roussel, Gerard, Reformer, 14. 

Rousee, Eliza, J. Western, 
Maria, Mary, Merrett, Rob- 
ert, Samuel, Rev. Samuel, 
Virginia, William, 352. 

Rowe, Sallie, 326. 

Rowland, Elizabeth. George, 
George I., Henry, 337. 



424 



INDEX. 



Rowland, Louisa, 270; Martha, 
337; Martha J., Mary E., 
Rev. Robert G., 270; Thomas, 
Thomas Smith, William, 337. 

Rowlett, 337. 

Roy, James Philip, Kate Louisa, 
Lizzie Perkins, Susan Carter, 
243, 

Royall, Ann Elizabeth, 256; 
Aubyn Archer, 254; Elizabeth 
Cocke, 254, 255; Geo. Willie 
Powell, John Albert, John 
Powell, 255; Joseph, 250; 
Joseph Albert, 254; Joseph 
Wade, 256; Mary Alice, Mary 
Aubyn, Richard Rendall, 255; 
Rowena Glowina, 256; Sarah 
Seignora, William Archer, 
William Segar Archer, 255. 

Rudd, 289. 

Ruffin, Edmund, Edward, George, 
188; Jane, 233; Jane S., 188; 
Mrs. Julian, 141. 

Russell, Arthur Emerson, Ar- 
thur Lewellen, Carrie Agnes, 
Charles Eugene, Charles Law- 
rence, 313; Coldwell, 314; 
Edward, Eva Josephine, 313; 
(rertrude, 222; Rev. Harvey, 
Hazel Grace, Icel Ines, Law- 
rence, Lonius, Lula May, 
Minnie Cecil, Myrtle Fay, 
313; Judge Thomas, 312. 

Ryals, Martha Watkins, 227. 

Saintes, trial of Fontaine at, 

102. 
Sale, Fannie E., Dr. L. P., 319. 
Salle, Mollie, 275. 
Sample, Florence Howard, 

James A., 284. 
Sampson, Alice Gordon, 225; 

Mary, 233; Richard, Susan 

Josephine, 219. 
Samuel, Benjamin, Edmond, 

Eleanor, 335; Mary Mottley, 

336; R. P., 338; Richard, 

Washington, William, 335. 
Sandifer, Mary, 353. 
Satterthwaite, Annie E., 232. 
Saubize, Huguenot general, 75; 

naval commander, 77. 
Saumur, Political Assembly of 

Huguenots at, 68; captured 

by Louis XIII, 75. 
Saunders, Judge Fleming, 190; 

Frederick Courtney, James 



Ligon, 254; Jesse, 364; Leati- 
tia, 202; Mary William, 254; 
Mancy (Samuel), 289; Sarah, 
364; W^illiam James, 254. 

Scanland, Alma, Charles Boone, 
Cora, Edgar, Grace, Harvey, 
Harvey Hobson, Mary Eliza- 
beth, Minnie, Nellie, Telina, 
312. 

Scarce, Elizabeth, 270. 

Scearce, Charlie, Henry, Lewis, 
Ruhamah, 331. 

Scott, Benjamin Watkins, 197; 
Clarissa, 216; David, Edwin 
Hoge, 197; Dr. George, 266; 
Henry E., Jane, 216; John, 
266, 286; Josephine Emma, 
197; Judith S., 297; Nannie, 
217; Olympia Dupuy, 266; S., 
297; Sallie E., Susan, 216; 
Susan Dupuy, 197; William 
T., 266. 

Sears, Bessie Hamner, Edward 
Percy, Fannie Evelyn, Her- 
man Dupuy, Kate, Lester 
Paul, M. Alice, Mary Pearl, 
Samuel D., Samuel Wiltse, 
213. 

Seay, 363. 

Sechrist, Lizzie, 353. 

Segrave, Lady Elizabeth, 189. 

Sehon, Eulalie Bo\\'man, John 
Leister, Leister, 369; Lucy, 
348. 

Seneschal, trial of Fontaine be- 
fore, 102. 

Senior, Francis Henry, Joseph 
David, Martha Belle, 346. 

Sequier, President of Parlia- 
ment, 28. 

Sergeant, Carryl Lee, David 
Evins, Walter Edwin, Walter 
Scott, William Thompson, 
William Watkins, 197. 

Severance, Pearl, 360. 

Sevier, Charles, Dr. Robert, 
372; Robert Woodson, 373. 

Sexsmith, Oliver M., 312. 

Shallcross, Ella, 367. 

Shannon, Dr., Albert, Minnie, 
Thomas, 360. 

Sharp, Charles, Eliza F., Flor- 
ence Southall, William Wil- 
loughby Southall, 258. 

Shaw, C. F., 286; Martha Glen, 
Samuel D., 309. 



INDEX. 



425 



Shearer, Corinne, Eva, Eliza- 
beth Victory, F. C, Harry 
Junius, Mary, Nannie Alice, 
Thomas Marshall, Trabue, 
William Trabue, 320. 

Sheffield, 204, 

Shell, 334. 

Shelton, Ann Watkins, George, 
James, John Wilson, Louise, 
Mary E., Peter, Ruth, Sarah, 
Thomas, Virginia, William 
Henderson, 203. 

Sheridan, Anne (Byrne), CJaro- 
line Ashton, John J., Lucinda 
Morgan (Ashton), Solomon 
Neill, 294. 

Shirley, Bettie Brannin, Bran- 
nin Combs, Lewis A., Zach- 
arias, 340. 

Sherreli, Arthur, 348, 348. 

Shields, of the Dupuys, 89; 
motto on, 90; of Knights 
Hospitallers, 90. 

Shipman, Mary, Paul R., 345. 

Shipp, Elizabeth A., Margaret, 
334. 

Shobe, Edmonia, 288. 

Shoffner, Dr. J. H., Jeanette, 
210. 

Shook, Lucy, 329. 

Shoomaker, Minerva, 310. 

Shore, Beverly Eggleston, 241; 
Cornelia Howard, John James, 
Julia Dupuv, Lou Ward, 242; 
Martha, 239; Martha Elvira, 
Mary Louise, Robert E., 
Robert Edwin, 241; Sallie 
Fletcher, 242. 

Shotwelh Carrie, J. W., Kath- 
erine, Philip, Warden, 371. 

Shrine, Lizzie, 297. 

Simmons, Aaron Trabue, John 
H., 324. 

Simpson. J. G., Lawrence, 299; 
Dr. Richard L., 22L 

"Sin, The Hidden," 194. 

Singleton, Charles Carter, Eliza, 
Harriet, John, John Coles, 
Kate, Lucy, Lucy Champe, 
Lucy E., Maria, 257; Mary 
Carter, 256, 257; Rebecca 
Coles, Richard Randolph, 257; 
Capt. Z., 290. 

Sisson, Carrie, 311. 

Skipwith, Ladv Jane, Sir Wil- 
liam, 188. 

Skinner, Emily, Phinehas, 294. 



Slaughter, Ella, 289. 

Slayback, Alex. Lamdin, Alonzo, 
Alonzo William, Charles E., 
Grace, Katie, Mabel, Min- 
nette, Minnie, Preston, Susie, 
271. 

Small, Benjamin, 331, 331; 
Elizabeth Medora, 333; Eva, 
331; Lucinda Bassett, 294; 
Lutie, Nellie, Olivia, 331; 
Thomas, 294. 

Smith, 231, 298, 337, 352; Abe- 
lard Temple, 272; Abra-m, 
Abram Owen, 337; Almira, 
272; Annie Duke, 344; Annie 
Elizabeth, 338; Annie Laurie, 
349; Dr. Austin Dupuy, 344; 
Beulah, 227; Carl Rodney, 
Caroline, 272; Caroline Britt, 
197; Chas. Parke, 344; Charles 
S., 272; Charlton H., 237; 
Clarke Owen, 337; Dwight, 
272; Edgar, 318; Edward, 
Eliza Emily, 272; Elizabeth, 
337; Elizabeth Dupuy, Emmai 
Lee, 237; Franklin, 272; Dr. 
H. L., 233; Harriet, 337, 337; 
Helen Dupuy. 234; Horace 
Hanfon, 338; Isabella, 272; 
Rev. Jacob H., 233; Jacob 
Henry, 234; James, 272, 338, 
338; James Lithyon, 338; 
Jeanie, 337; Jennetta, 272; 
Capt. Jesse, 343; Joseph, 318, 
338; Joseph Helm, 344; Jo- 
seph Watkins. Joseph Whit- 
field, 272; Judith, .306; Julia, 
286; Justin, 818; Kate, 286; 
Leander, 272; Lottie, 309; 
Lucinda Ann, 359; Lucy, 251; 
Lucy Ann, Lula, 272; Luther, 
210; Martha, Martha Ann, 
337; Martha Minter, 272; 
Martha Owen, 338; Mary 
Elizabeth, 272; Marv J., 219; 
Mattie T., 222; Maude L., 
272; Mav Lucilo, 210; Meme, 
337; Mildred, Mildred Helm, 
344; Nettie, 280; Nicholas, 
337; Oscar, 272; Owen, 337; 
Pauline, 196; Pearl, 311; 
Raymond, 272; Raymond Du- 
puv. 237; Rebecca.' 273; Reu- 
ben, 366 ; Richard Edward, 272 ; 
Robert, 337, 349; Rev. Robert 
Asa, Sarah V.. 237; Susan 
Anna, 338; Susan Helen, 344. 



426 



INDEX. 



Smith, Susan Viola, 344; Rev. 
T. C, 237; Thomas, 311, 337, 
337; Thos. Cole Spencer, 237; 
Rev. Thomas D., 337; Thomas 
J., 195; Verna, 272; Virgil 
Drane, 344; Walter Abelard, 
272; Walter Owen, 338; War- 
ren Dupuy, 238 ; Dr. Waverly, 
350; Wesley Marion, 222; 
Western, 352; William, 272, 
338, 338; William Gray, 272; 
William Helm, 344; William 
M., 222; Dr. Winfield S., 349; 
Winthrop Hopkins, Zack Bur- 
gess, 344; Zachariah, 343; 
Zaekary Fred., 307, 343, 344; 
Zana, 318. 

Snead, Wiltshire Cardwell, Wilt- 
shire Lacy, 212. 

Sneed, Rev. Frank Woodford, 
370; James, 351; Mary Kirby, 
350. 

Snyder, John, William, 266. 

South, Annie, Rev. Polk, 318. 

Southall, 203; Daeey, Elizabeth 
(Barrett), 251; Emily, Eve- 
lyn Henry, Florence Carter, 
258; H. A., 195; James Cocke, 
James Powell Cocke, Joseph 
Allen, Lizzie Lyle, Lucy 
Smith, Martha Cocke, 258; 
Martha (Vandervall), Martha 
(Wood), 251; Mary Martha, 
IVIary Stuart, 258; Maj. Ste- 
phen, 251; Stephen Valentine, 
Thompson Brown, 258; Tur- 
ner, 251; Valentine, 258, 258; 
Valentine Wood, 251; Wil- 
liam. 258, 272; William 
Henry, 257. 

Southerland, Geo. Cornelius, 
197, 197. 

SpearinfT, Jessie, 201. 

Seers, Sim, 277. 

Spencer, Clara B., 316; Eliza 
W. (Fennel!), Elizabeth May, 
Frances (Pearce), 211; Hen- 
rietta Belle, 212; John, Tohn 
Bartholomew, 211; John F., 
316; Nancy M., 227; Thomas 
Cole, 211, 211, 211; Rev. 
Thomas Cole, 211. 

Sprague, Chastain, Ernest W., 

319. 
St. Andre, Romaiiist general, 40. 



St. Anthonies, Huguenot town 
captured and women of vio- 
lated, 76. 

St. Bartholomew's Day, mas- 
sacre of, 48. 

St. Dennis, battle at, 42. 

St. Heyer, Anne, 176. 

St. Valery, assembly of Hugue- 
nots at, 42. 

Stade. Maria G., 199. 

Stamps, 182. 

Standiford, Nannie, 285. 

Stanlev, Judge, 285 ; P. B., Sal- 
lie Elizabeth, 305. 

Staples, De Jarnette, 222. 

Starke, Anne, Maj. John, 262. 

Stebbins, Laura May, 221. 

Stecre, Albert C, Cyrus S., 
Grace, Johnnette, Mabel G., 
Nettie L., Sarah, 309. 

Steel, Dudly M., Susan, 296. 

Stein, Marshall, Reta, 321. 

Stephens, Amelia, 369; E. W., 
368; Emma Jane, 305; Flor- 
ence May, Frank Charles, 
George Albert, 249; Hugh, 
James, 369; Gov. Lon V., 293; 
Marion Elizabeth, 249; Mary 
Moss, 369; Nannie, 285; Sid- 
ney, Susan, 369; William 
James, 249. 

Stephenson. Mary Jane, 359; 
Phoebe, 192. 

Steptoe, Lucy C. 196. 

Stevens, Harry, 356; John B., 
Johnnette B.. 309; Louise, 
Mabel, Mary, Thomas B., 356. 

Stewart, Elizabeth, 330; H. B., 
288; John, Stella, 330. 

Stinson, Albert, Edna, 272. 

Stites, Eliza, 297. 

Stith. Erie, Hattie. J. C, Leslie, 
Marv C, Paul, Wooten, 288. 

Stocks, 199. 

Stokes, Blanche V., 240; Mary 
Kenna, Capt. Richard, 220. 

Stollenwerch, A. G., Florence 
McKinnev, Mary Augusta, 
223. 

Stone, 362; Calib, 362; Clark, 
204; Emma, 353; Josiah W., 
362; Phoeba A., 197; Walter, 
362. 

Stovall. Allison W., Cornelia, 
277; Elizabeth J., 277, 284; 
George A., James K. B., John 
W., Laura, Louise Fowler, 277. 



INDEX. 



427 



Stovall, Martha, 277; William 
Howard, 277, 278, 280, 282; 
William S., 277. 

Stretch, Dr. Aaron, Frances 
(Gondey), Margaret Hodges, 
Nathaniel, 366. 

Stringfellow, Lizzie, 204. 

Strother, Frances, William, 290. 

Stuart, Ann, 193. 

Stultz, Anne Virginia, Francis 
Field, James Davis, Magda- 
lene Staite, Susan Reive, 
Sydnor Marshall, William M., 
203. 

Sublett, Abraham, 143, 263; 
Aepia Woolfolk, 290; Benja- 
min, 145; Daniel, 298; David, 
292; Eliza, 290; Fannie, 292; 
Frances, 291, 292; Frances 
(McGruder), 263; George, 
290. 291; James, 142, 144, 
289; James Taylor, 290; Jen- 
nie, 292; Dr. Joel Dupuy, 296; 
John, 290, 292; John Cald- 
well, 290; John T., John V., 
291; Judith, 298; Lewis, 263, 

290, 292, 297, 298; Lewis H., 
289; Littleberry, 263; Louis, 
143, 144; Margaret, 289; 
Marian, 291; Martha A., 289; 
Martha (Martin), 263; Mary, 

291, 292, 298, 298; Mary C, 
291; Mary Frances, 289; Mor- 
ton, 292 ; Nancy P., 291 ; Peter 
LeAvis, 263; Phoebe Ann, 291; 
Robert, Sallie, 298; Sus.an, 

292, 292, 296; Susanna (Du- 
puy), 263; Thomas, 292, 292; 
William, 289, 292, 292, 297, 
298; William Edward, 289; 
Zackary, 291. 

Suggett, Benjamin, David Cas- 
tleman, Judith, Lucy, Samuel, 
Sophronia M., 336. 

Sullenger, Dr., Mattie, 266. 

Sully, Minister of State, 62; 
removed from office, 67; 
tribute of, to Henry IV, 67. 

Summers, Alice Brannin, 342; 
Anna Perliot, Charles Eugene, 
317; Daniel Brannin, .341 ; Ed- 
ward Washington, 317; Ed- 
win Harrison, Elizabeth Rob- 
erts, 341; Eugenia, 342; Geo. 
Anthony, Harry, Howard, 
John, John W., Lottie Belle, 
317: Margaret H., 342; Mary 



Elizabeth, Matilda, 317; Mir- 
iam Brannin, 341; Nora, 
Sadie, Verdia, 317. 

Suter, Amanda, 315; Isabel, 
346. 

Sutherland, Hallie, Mary, Sien, 
349. 

Sutton, Amos, 303; Anthony 
Benton, Chalmer Lee Bell, 
Charles Bell, Clara Catherine 
Alice, Davis Anthony, 316; 
Davis Biggs, 315; Edward 
Trabue, 316; Eliaza Clay, 315; 
Eliza, Emma V., George Ed- 
ward, George Vest, 316; J. 
Price. 313; Joanna Eliza, 
John Polk, Lonia Eugene, 
Lottie Alice, Maggie E., Ma- 
tilda Agnes, Matilda Alice, 
Nathaniel C, Nathaniel Hill, 
316; Sarah Jane, 315. 

Swain, Elva Dupuy, 205 ; George 
Carrie, 206; George Wash- 
ington, Gracie Lynn, Linda 
Hume, Lula Watkins, 205; 
Mary Adelaide, 206; Mary 
George, Nellie May, 205; 
Wycliff, 206. 

Swaney, Eva, John, John W., 
Robert H., 353. 

Sweeny, Minor Major, Oscar, 
Oscar T., 331. 

Sweeter, Henry M., 354. 

Sword, of Bartholomew Dupuy, 
96, 140. 

Svnod, National Reformed, 
'meetings of, 29, 32, 64, SO; 
edict to and Synod's action, 
69; congratulations of, to 
King, 72; spirit of the last 
meeting of, 80. 

Taliaferro, Richard Sterling, 
205. 

Tarascan, Nannie, 340. 

Tarrant, 291. 

Tate, Celine Cugneau. 191. 

Taylor, 301 ; Anne Willing, Dr. 
Armistead Green, 252 ; Barry, 
Elawson. Elizabeth, 368; 
Evelyn Harrison, 252; Frank, 
320; George Keith, 252; Hun- 
ter. 368; James, 290, 320; 
Col. James, Gen. James, 368; 
James Aubyn, 252; James 
Marshall, 320; Rev. Joseph, 
335; Julian, 240, 240. 



428 



INDEX. 



Taylor, Kiturah L. (Moss), Lo- 
gan Hunter, 368; Louisa, 304; 
Martha, 290; Mary Byrd, 
Mary (Harrison), Richard, 
Richard Field, Dr. Richard 
F., 252; Robert, 368; Rosalie 
Green, 252; Sarah, 184; Sarah 
W., 251; Susan, 273; Susan 
L. (Barry), 368; Virginia, 
319; William H., 304. 

Terrell, A. P., Allen Price, 
Clarence Monroe, George, 
Katherine, Lelia, 307. 

Terrv, 270. 297; Alvah, Alvah 
L.,'307; Bettie, 297; Buford, 
307; Catherine, 270; G«orge, 
297; John, 307; Marv, 297, 
307; Maude, William,' 307. 

Theile, 272. 

Thelfort, Mollie, 355. 

Thilly, 362; Gertrude, 362. 

Thomas, Emma Arsenath, 244; 
John, Kate, 349; Laura (rer- 
trude, 333; Lucy Jane. 344; 
Marietta, 247; Sallie, Wyatt 
J., 349. 

Thomasson, Anna Cornelia, 350; 
Annie, 349; Charles Leonard, 
Elias, 350; Elias D., 351; 
Emma, 349; Ethel, 350; 
Georgiane, 349; Helm, 350; 
Henrietta, 348; Hettie, 349; 
Joel, 350; John, 348; John J., 
350; Dr. John James, 347; 
Joseph, 348, 349; Joseph M., 
348; Laura, 349; Laura Helm, 
Leonard, Louise, 350; Martha, 
348; Marv, 349, 350; Mary 
Mottley, Mary R., 348; Mary 
S., 351 ; Nannine, Nelson, Nel- 
son Bartholomew, 350; Poin- 
dexter, 337; Sallie Dupuy, 
348; Sarah Catherine, 351; 
Sarah Dupuy, 349; Sarah 
Elizabeth, 348; William Poin- 
dexter, 348, 349. 

Thomlason, Dr., Ada, 289. 

Thompson, 372; Agnes W., Al- 
len W., Bessie, Charles T., 
308; Cornelia, Elizabeth C, 
238; Fannie. George O'Bryan, 
George T., Hill. 308; James 
Dupuy, 238; Jane R.. Kate, 
308; M. A., 183; Col. Manilus, 
297; Martha, 290; Mary El- 
len, 238; Mattie W., 308; 
Richard C., Samuel Anderson, 



238; Sidney, 232; W. B., 268; 
Col. William, 290; William 
D., 238. 

Thomson, Gen. David, Marion 
Wallace. 332; Mattie, 287; 
Sallie, 331. 

Thornburgh, William, 353. 

Thornton, Allie, Bennie, 212; 
Caroline M., 368; Frances H., 
Frank Floyd, Goldie, 212; 
John Henry, John Thomas, 
206; Lacy Wert, 212; Louis 
Dibrell, 213; Martin Dupuy, 
206; Minnie Lee, Robert Lacy, 
212; Thomas Jefferson, Wat- 
kins Lefevre, 206. 

Thurman, Lucy, 298. 

Timberlake, Keightly, 225. 

Tinsley, Agnes Lee, 195; Alonzo 
Calvin, 195, 206; Angella, 
194; Annie, Calvin William- 
son, 195; Cecil J., 194; Ches- 
ter, Christina, Edward Daniel, 
Irene Watkins, 195; James 
J., 194; James W., 195; James 
Whitfield, 194; Jesse N., John 
Rhorer, Lavalette Amelia, 
Louise, Luther, Mary Bland, 
Mary Florence, Mary Jesse, 
195; Mary L., 194; Poca- 
hontas, 195; Robert Bruce, 
194; Robert Lee, William, 
195. 

Todd, 303; Ashton, 255; Capt. 
Thomas, 297. 

Tolbert, Jane, 295. 

Toleration, petition for, 34; 
edict of, 38. 

Toliver, Belle, 315; Jennie, 310. 

Tootle, Austin, 372; Catherine, 
295; Catherine O'Neill, Fran- 
ces Sublett, George Duck- 
worth, 296; Harry King, 
Harry M., 372; John, 295; 
John James, 296; Lillian Og- 
den, 372; Mary McCord, 372; 
Milton, 295, 296, 296; Wil- 
liam Dameron, 296. 

Topping, Harper Daniel, N. B., 
Nathaniel Blunt, Ruth, 221. 

Towns, Alma Ruth, Anna Jean, 
Clinton Harvey, Elizabeth 
Gertrude, Emma Dorothy, 
Helen Garland, Mary Cynthia, 
Richard Dupuy, 248. 

Trabue, 303, 318, 319. 321. 324; 
Addie, 309; Alice E., 318. 



INDEX. 



429 



Trabue, America, 323; Andrew, 
267; Ann, 298; Ann Eliza, 323; 
Anne Belle, 307; Anne Leti- 
tia, 322; Annie B., 319; An- 
thony, 169, Church letter and 
manner of escape of from 
France, 259, entry of land 
of, 260; Anthony E. D., 310; 
Anthony Edward Dupuy, 259, 
308; Antoine, 143; Archer, 
321; Benjamin, 322, 322;. Dr. 
Benjamin F., 307; Benja. 
Julia, 322; Ben McDowell, 
Dr. Benja. McDowell, 319; 
Benja. Tunnell, 321; Bennora, 
307; Bettie T., Buford, 308; 
Charles C, 310; Charles Clay, 
303, 309, 317; Charles E., 317; 
Charles Edward, 321; Chas- 
tain, 266, 318; Christine, 308; 
Christine M., 309; Corina, 
297; Cynthia Ann, 303; Dan- 
iel, 259, 264, 267, 298; David 
Lee, 267; Drane, 307; Ed- 
monia, 321; Edmund F.. 318; 
Edna, 321, 321; Edward, 264, 
267, 267, 320, 322, 323; Ed- 
ward Haskins, 320, 322; 
Edwin Putnam, 322; Eliza, 
298; Eliza Jane. 321; Eliza- 
beth, 264, 266, 269, 301, 308, 
318, 319, 320, 323; Elizabeth 
Ann, Elizabeth Burns, 319; 
Elizabeth Dupuy, 307; Eliza- 
beth Jane, 317; Elizabeth T., 
267; Ellen, 298; Ellen Dunn, 
310; Ellen F., 324; Emily, 
319; Emma, 321, 323; Emma 
v., 317; Etta H., 319; Fene- 
lon, 320; Flavins J., 324; 
Frances, 299, 320; Franklin, 
267; George, 298, 310; Georcre 
O'B, 310; George W.. 269, 
309; George Washington, 302, 
308; Gordon Carlyle, 307; 
Hannah J., 319; Harriet, 322; 
Harriet K, 324; Harriet 
Olympia, 319; Haskins. 321; 
Haskins D., 319, 324; Helen, 
307; Helon M., 319; Hen- 
rietta, 260, 318; Henry, 319; 
Henry Buckner, 307; Isaac 
Hodgen, 318; Isaac Hodgens, 
322; J. William, 317; Jacob, 
257; James. 262, 267, 269, 276, 
297, 299, 322; Rev. James, 
297; James Parks, 321 ; James 



Upton, 297; James Woods, 
310; Jane, 262; Jane E., 303; 
Jane W., 309; Jennie, 319; 
Joan, 309; John, 259, 262, 
269, 298, 298; John E., 180; 
Dr. JohnE., 303; John James, 
259, 320; John T., 317; John 
Thom.as, 318; John Walter, 
321; John Wilson, 322; Joseph 
B., 307; Joseph Haskins, 321; 
Joseph Woods, 309 ; Josephine 
Augusta, 322; Judel, 319; 
Judith, 259, 266, 266, 297; 
Judith Helen, 307; Julia An- 
na, Julia Canna, 267; Kate, 
307; Katherine, 317; Laura 
Alice, 320; Lavinia, 267; Law- 
rence, 323; Dr. Leroy P., 319; 
Letitia, 320, 324; Lewis B., 
317; Lolah, 321; Lucinda, 
318; Lucy Ellen, 320; Lucy 
P., 318; Lucy Virginia, Luth- 
er, Lyman, 321; Macon, 259; 
Magdaline, 259, 262; Magda- 
lene (Flournoy), 259; Mar- 
garet, 323; Marian, 318, 321; 
Martha, 264, 267, 298, 303, 
319; Martha Agnes, 322; 
Martha Ann, 308; "Martha G., 
324; Martha Jane, 269; Mar- 
tha T., 266, 308; Mary. 263, 
266, 267, 297, 298, 298; Mary 
B., 317; Mary Elizabeth, 321; 
Mary Elvira.' 269; Mary Glen, 
309; Marv Jane, 323; Mary 
Olympia, 322; Mary (Polly), 
301; Matilda Jane, 320; Ma- 
tilda O., 303; Mattie Y., 319; 
Maviah X., 324; Miranda, 
323; Mohala Ann, 317; Mur- 
ray B., 323; Nancy. 284; 
Nancy Agnes. 318; Nancy 
Haskins. 302; Nancv Lucretia, 
320; Nellie E., 308- Olvmpia, 
298, 320; Olympia Dupuy, 
269; Olympia '(Dupuy), 302; 
Paul, 321, 321; Phoebe, 202; 
Phoebe N., .323, 323; Presley, 
298, 298; Prince Edward, 304; 
Raymond Welch, 322; Re- 
becca, 319; Rebecca F., 322, 
323; Richard, 297; Robert, 
206, 267. 298, 298. 298: Rob- 
ert B., 318; Robert Henry, 
322; Robert Wood, 309; 
Roselvn, 324; Ruth. 317; 
Ruth Elizabeth, 322; 



430 



INDEX. 



Trabue, Sallie, 297, 297, 298; 
Samuel, 265; Sarah, 297; 
Sarah E., 309, 317; Sarah 
Ellen, 269; Sella A., 317; 
Stephen, 264, 267, 321; 
Stephen Fitz James, 318, 
318; Susan, 303; Susanna, 
265; Taylor Jones, Van Culin, 
309; Virginia Taylor, 318; 
Willet C, 318; William, 263, 
267, 284, 297, 298, 318, 319, 
320; William Aaron, 322; 
William Anthony, 269; Wil- 
liam Benjamin, 321; William 
D., 310; William Dunn, 309; 
William E., 317, 317; William 
H., 319; William Law, 322. 

Trask, W. H., 341. 

Trice, Dabney Minor, Robert 
Nelson, 256. 

Troxell, Maude, 344. 

Trueheart, T, J., 236. 

Tuck, 180. 

Tucker, 351 ; Nannie, 302. 

Tullis, Alice, Benjamin, Dr. 
Benjamin. Edward, Harry, 
Lena, 323. 

Tunnell, Estella,, 321. 

Turley, Amanda B., 316. 

Turner, A. G., 323; Edward P., 
Ella, 204; George R., Henry 
R., 320; Irvine, Dr. Jesse H., 
Jessie May, Leonora, Oren 
Barrow, Walter R., William 
Watkins, 204. 

Turpin, Dorothy, 213. 

Tutt, Annie, 314. 

Tyler, 334; President John, Dr. 
Laeklan, 255; Paul, 334. 

Valleau, Anne, 391. 

Van Ander, Carl Vattel, Paul 
Drane, 346. 

Vance, 199. 

Van Culin, Dupuy, 308; Eliza, 
Samuel W., 307; Trabue, 307, 
308 ; William T., 308, 308. 

Varick, Jane Dey, John, 354. 

Vassy, conflict at, 39. 

Vaughan, Mary, 236; William, 
291. 

Vaux, Catherine de, 92. 

Venable, Charles, Col. Charles 
Scott, 258; Maggie, 231. 

Vendome, conference of Bour- 
bons at, 31. 



Vernon, Mollie Olevia, 182. 
"Victor? Who shall be," 194. 
Vilain (See Levilain). 
Villegagnon, 28. 
Voss, Emily Gordon, 258. 

Waddell, Alice A., 271. 

Waddy, Samuel, 358. 

Wade, Mary T., 308. 

Waggener, Elizabeth Green, 270; 
Lucy, 298; Martha, 324. 

Waggoner, Burns, Madella, 349. 

Wagner, Martha, 331. 

Wailes, Robert A., 240. 

Waldenses, Massacre of, 22. 

Waldrop, Mary Elizabeth, 302. 

Walker, 334; Blanche Miller, 
219; Charles, 351; Elizabeth, 
218, 351; Elizabeth Knight, 
219; Ellen, 351; Frances, 218; 
Frances Rives, 220; Frank, 
219; Gulielna, 221; Guy Mil- 
ler, 219: James Hickman, 
299; Dr. John, 220; John Ed- 
munds. 219 ; John Parker, 352 ; 
Josephine Sampson, 219, 220; 
Judith Townes, 218; Lelia, 
219; Lulie R., 227; M. D., 
351; Mary Dupuy, 218; Mary 
Kenna, Mary Susan, 220; 
Maude Miller, 219; Maysie, 
306; Nannie Watkins, 219; 
Patrick Henry, 351; Richard 
Sampson, 219, 219; Robert, 
221; Sarah Stokes, 220; Sa- 
rah Watkins, 189. 218; Susan 
Agnes, 200. 219 ; Tliomas Bev- 
erlv, 351; William Townes, 
219; Col. William Townes, 
185; Dr. William Townes, 
218; Rev. William Townes, 
220. 

Wall, Judith, 358. 

Wallace, Lydia, 331. 

Waller, Robert, Susan Frances, 
William, 289. 

Walthall, Mattie, 302. 

Walton, Elizabeth S., 184; Nan- 
nie Greyson, 227. 

Waples, Eugene A., Mortimer 
Lee, 311. 

Ward, W. H., 195. 

Warder, Prudence, 273. 

Ware, Agnes Payne, 185; L., 
270. 

Waring, Bazel, Martha, Gen. 
Thomas, 245. 



INDEX. 



431 



Warinner, Bodein, Carrie, 371; 
Gussie, 372; H. C, 371; 
Harry, 372. 

"Warning, The Gipsy's," 194. 

Warriner, Adelaide, Belle, Cora, 
Dr. Richard 0., 334. 

Waters, Mary, 339; Dr. Wil- 
liam T., 315. 

Watkins, 352; Adelaide Amelia, 
205; Agnes Morton, 195; Ag- 
nes (Morton), 181 ; Alice, 275; 
Alverda Hall, 205; Amelia 
Louisa, 245; America, 352; 
America Hairston, 203, 203; 
Ann W., 203; Anna, 275; 
Anna Adelaide, 245; Anna 
Margaret, 205; Anna Martin, 
204; Anne Louise, 198; Anne 
Maria, 276; Rev. Asa Dupuy, 
231; Benjamin, 183, 184, 200, 
269, 275; Benjamin F., 275; 
Benja. Franklin, 198, 199; 
Caroline, 275; Caroline Hunt, 
199; Caroline Lawrence, 245; 
Caroline Virginia, 197; Caro- 
line W., 275; Carrie D., 199; 
Catherine, 275; Charlotte El- 
len, 245; Charlotte Harris, 
206; Daniel Green, Du Gee, 
Edna Earl, 198; Edward 
Waverly, 245; Edwin, Eliza- 
beth, 275; Elizabeth Magda- 
lene, 204; Elizabeth P., 203; 
Elizabeth W., 199; Ella 
Amelia, 205; Ellen, 203; El- 
len S. Bowen. 202; Emily 
Dupuy, 231, 236; Evangeline 
St. C, Florence N., ^245; 
Frances Ann, 199; Franklin 
Chenault, 198; George, 275; 
George Hairston. 203. 203; 
Harriet Hall, 205; Harriet 
Virginia, 206; Dr. Henry An- 
derson, 199, 219; Henry M^nr- 
tin, 200; Henry Thomas, Ida 
Lee, 198; Jacob, 272; James 
Martin, 206; James W., 275; 
Jane Edmimds, 197; Jane W., 
Jennie, Jewell, 275; Joel, 183; 
Col. Joel, 181; John, 183, 275, 
352; John Dupuy, 197, 198, 
200, 200, 204; Jolin Franklin, 
198; Joseph, 269, 275; Joseph 
Dupuy, 200; Joseph P., 199; 
Judith Saunders, 203; Jud- 
son, 275; Katherine Christa, 
198; Laban, Laura, 275; Lea- 



titia, 203; Lenn-aeus Dupuy, 
206; Lettie Stone, 198; Lizzie, 
275; Louisa, Louise, 203; Lu- 
cile Ann, 198; Lucy Ann, 272; 
Lucy P., 199; Magdalene Du- 
puy', 203; Maggie Lyle, 199; 
Marcellus Dupuy, 205; Mar- 
garet, 276; Margaret Louisa, 
Maria Hall, 205 ; Martha, 275, 
275; Mary, 183, 202, 274; ■ 
Mary Elethia, 205; Mary 
Florence, 197; INIary Joseph- 
ine, 200; Mary Lefe\Te, 194; 
Mary Louisa, 204; Mary (Pol- 
ly), W., 181; Mary Purnell, 
231; Marv Saunders, Mary 
Thomas, 203 ; Mildred S., 229, 
231; Mollie Daniel, 198; Nan- 
cy Wilson, 203, 203; Nannie 
Townes, 196, 200; Parker, 
275; Peter Dupuv, 203, 206; 
Peter Wilson, 203; Phoebe 
Augusta, 197; Powhatan Vir- 
ginius, 205 ; Ptolomy Lef evre, 
184, 192; Raymond Lavillon, 
245; Rebecca, 276; Capt. 
Richard Henry, 231; Robert, 
218; Robert Bruce, 244, 244; 
Rosa Elizabeth, 198, 198; 
Sallie Ellis, 202, 203; Sallie 
Harrison, 205; Samuel, 199, 
203; Samuel Ferdinand, 198; 
Samuel Price, 199; Sher- 
ly Caroline, 198; Stephen, 
183; Stephen Dupuy, 183, 191 ; 
Stephen Henry, 199; Susan, 
275, 276; Susan Ann, 198, 
204; Susan C, 199; Susan 
Elizabeth, 200; Susan Jane, 
197; Susan L., 203; Susan 
Maria, 204; Susan Walker, 
200; Tabitha, 275; Thomas, 
180, 181, 181, 183. 203, 211; 
Thrimas Dupuy. 205; Thomas 
Gholson, 204 ;' Thomas Har- 
din, 202; Thomas Joel, 108; 
Thomas Linnaeus, 204; Vir- 
ginia, 231 ; Virginia Dupuy, 
244; Virginia Judith, 245; 
Walthus, 275; Washington 
Lafayette, 204; Wilber L., 
108; William Lafayette, 202; 
William Walker, 200. 
Watson. Dr., 2.37; Elizabeth, 
315; Hodgen, 287; James T., 
Julia, 315: La Rue, 287; Lind- 
sey,319; Margaret, Olivia, 3 15. 



432 



INDEX. 



Watson, Samuel T., 314; Dr. 
Taylor Jones, 315; Van D., 
287; William C, 315. 

Watts, Carrie, L., Willia.m, 330. 

Weakly, Armstrong Beattie, 
Catherine, Charles Enright, 
Francis O'Neill, Jannette 
Landis, 296; Joseph L., 308; 
Lawrence O'Neill, 296, 296; 
Martha, 308; Thomas, Vir- 
ginia Huggins, William Beat- 
tie, 296. 

Webb, 336; George, 255. 

Webber, 358; Anne, 357. 

Weber, Frank, James Henry, 
Jennie, Kossuth, Kossuth W., 
M. P., William Dupuy, 237. 

Weeks, Elizabeth, 308. 

Weiseger, Mary Boiling, 254. 

Welch, Elenor, 321. 

Weller, George, Harry, 267. 

Welling, Charles, 236. 

Wells, Florence, 289; Laura, 
337; Luther, 286; Mary, 313. 

West, 180. 

Western, Eliza, John, Louis, 
Lucy Jane, Robert, William, 
352. 

Wheeler, Benjamin Jackson, 
352; Claudine Martin, Elly 
Brannin, 351; Frances Ellen, 
Hanson Coit, Hanson Walker, 
352; J. B., 292; J. W., 351; 
James W., Mary Russell, Sid- 
ney Sea, William Beverly, 
352. 

Whitaker, Col. Walter C, 345, 
346. 

White, 337; Amanda, Elizabeth, 
299; Flora M., 347; Florence, 
John S., John Stanley, 287; 
Joseph Barton, 298; Laurene 
Laman, 287; Oscar, 299, 299; 
Sarah, 301; Thomas, 298; 
Willie, 237. 

Whitehurst, Mollie, William, 
226. 

Whiteside, Rebecca, 352. 

Wickliffe, Alice, John D., Lily 
Logan, Mary, Nathaniel, Tra- 
bue, 320. 

"Wife, The Discarded," 194. 

Wight, Jeane Stone, 277. 

Wilcox, Anna Maria, Dr. Daniel 
Pinchback, Col. George, 365; 
Mary Moss, 367. 



Wilkerson, Edward, 182; Eliza- 
beth, 339. 

Wilkinson, A. G., George, Lu- 
cile, Mary, 362. 

"Will, The Cancelled," 194. 

William, Jennie, 349; Laura, 277. 

Williams, Ann, 286; Anne Rich- 
ardson, 222; Benjamin Wat- 
kins, 199; Bonnie Bell, Carrie 
Shelby, 222; Cornelia, 199; 
Edward G., 222; Eliza, 335 j 
J. R., 360; Julia, 238; Mary, 
299; Robert Martin, Robert 
W., Sallie Jane, 199. 

Williamson, Alma, Benjamin F., 
206; Honor, 309; Mabel E., 
Malcomb, Maria Dupuy, 206. 

Wills, Martha Lyle, 241; Pru- 
dence, 179. 

Willson, Edith, 328; Ermina 
Slater, 324; Fenelon R., 264; 
Frederick William, Harold, 
Herbert G., 328; Hester Eliza- 
beth, 327 ; Howard E., Hodgen 
Isaac, 328; John Horace, 347; 
John J., 329; Rev. John 
Slater, 324; Johnaphine S., 
328; Johnaphine Slater, 329; 
Leatitia, 324, 325; Lelene, 
Lottie L., 328; Luther M., 
326; Martha Leatitia, 328; 
Mary Franklin, 326; Olive 
Dupuy, 328; Olympia, 319, 
324; Parker Otwell, Ross, 
Sallie Garnett, 328. 

Wilson, Ada Lena, 289; Ann, 
362; Anna Mary, 225; 'Ar- 
thur, 289; Augustus, 362; 
Bettie A., 217; Carrie M., 
289; Edwin Graham, Rev. 
Edwin Lindsey, 225; Eliza- 
beth, Eueene, 289; Eugene 
Dupuy, 288; Floy, Hallie, 
Harry Dupuy, Hodgen Isaac, 
289; James, 362; Julia, Ju- 
liet, 289; Lavalette Dupuy, 
225; Leslie, 289; Lou, 362; 
Louis, 225; Martin Hodgen, 
Mary E., Mary Lena, Myer, 
289; Nancy, 183; Nathaniel 
Warfield, 362; Orlando Vic- 
tor, 289; Philip Lindsley, 225; 
Riley H., 288, 289; Thomson 
Burnham. 362; Victor, Wil- 
liam Edgar, 289. 

Wiltberger, Ann Warner, Cath- 
erine, Egbert, Elizabeth, 364. 



INDEX. 



433 



Wimbish, 215. 

Winn, George B., Nellie C, 
Robert W., William, 309, 

Winslow, Henry M., 338. 

Winston, Anna Maria, 284; Au- 
gusta, 285; Da\n(i, 319; Eliza 
Wagley, 285; George Alfred, 
284; Jennie, 285; John Dud- 
ley, Dr. John Dudley, 284; 
Joseph, Joseph K., 319; Ju- 
dith Dudley, 284; Louise, 285; 
Mary Overton, Tinsley, Wil- 
liam Caldwell, 284. 

Witcher, W., 195. 

Withers, Elizabeth Alice, 223; 
Minnie, 296. 

Witherspoon, Anna L., Clifford, 
Ford C., Guy Pittman, Horace 
Trabue, 305; M., 298; Nellie, 
305. 

Wolsley, Ruth E., 293. 

Wood, Addie Lou, 283; Cather- 
ine P., 217; George, Thomas, 
283. 

Woods, Agnes Green, 303. 

Woodsan, Albert, 365; Anthony 
Levilain, 363, 364; Belle, 365; 
Caroline Randolph, 362 ; Clara 
Gaultney, 372 ; Crittenden, 
365; Daniel, 363, 364; Do- 
rothea (Randolph), 361; Ed- 
win W., 364; Elizabeth, 362, 
363,364; Elizabeth (Branch), 
Elizabeth (Ferris), 360; Eliz- 
abeth Levilain, 373; Emeline, 
363; Emma, Fannie, 362; 
Frances, 363; Harriet, 364; 
Harry Philip, 372, 372; Isaac 
Thomas, 365; Jacob, 363; 
James, 362; James Robert, 
372; Jane, 363, 365; Jane 
Ann, 371; John, 360; Col, 
John, 361; Dr. John, 360 
John A., 362; John levilain 
363; John Stephen, 361; Jo 
siah, 361, 362; Judith (Tarl 
ton), 360; Lydia Anne, 372 
Lucy, 362; Maria, 364; Mar 
shall, 363; Martha. 362; Mar 
tha Anthony, 372; Marv 
.362, 363; Mary Ann, 363 
Mary Levilain, 364, 365 
Marv (Rovall), 361 : Matthew 
364, 365; Rev. Matthew, 360 
Mollie, 362; Nancy, 363 
Nannie, Olivia, 361; Philip 
363, 372; Pollins, 363; Rob 



ert, 360; Robert Hide, 373; 
Robert Saunders, 364; Sallie, 
Samuel, 363; Sara-h, 363, 364; 

Sarah ( ), 360; Sophia, 

Spottswood, 363; Stephen, 
360; Susan, 361, 368; Ta- 
bitha, 364, 365; Tarlton, 363; 
Thomas, 364, 364; Thomas 
Dupuy, 372, 372; Urey, Vir- 
ginia, 363; Virginia Eliza- 
beth, 372; Walter, 365; War- 
ren, 362, 363, 365; Judge 
Warren, 361; William, 362, 
364; William Founlain, 363. 

Wooldridge, Albert Scott, Bax- 
ter, Charles, 299; Claiborne, 
299, 320; Daniel, 298; De- 
metrius, Egbert, Harriet Clay, 
James Albert, 299; Josiah, 
264, 299; Judith, 269, 299; 
Latham, Levi, Livingston, 
Margaret, Margaret Moon, 
299; Martha, 298, 299; Mary 
Helen, 299; Mary (Polly), 
298; Mollie, Oscar, 299; Sam- 
uel, Seth, 298; Stephen, Wil- 
liam, Zackary, 299. 

Woolfork, George, James, James 
Austin, 338;^Katherine, 363; 
Martha J., Robert Owen, 
Turner, 338. 

Wooten, Hattie, Hodgen, Junius, 
Margaret, Mary, S. B., T, B,, 
Thomas, Victor, 288, 

Wootten, T., 188. 

Worcester, Thomas M., SfDl. 

Worrell, Clarence, E., Edward, 
356. 

Worth, Col. William H., 197. 

Wright, 180; Araminta, Carson, 
315; George, Hamilton, Mar- 
tha, 348; Mary, 315, 348; 
Marye, 304; Penelopy, 315, 

Wurts, John, 392. 

Wynn, Bessie Eggleston, Emma 
C., Helen Archer, Judith 
Maria, Mary E., Mary Eppes, 
Norah Meade, Robert E., 
William Thomas, 254. 

Yancey, Jemmie Edmonia, 300; 

Lucv, 281. 
Yates." 350; William, 276. 
Yost, 364. 
Young, Amv, 182; Georgia A., 

367 ; Hulda, 364. 

Zimmerman, Thomas, 340. 



434 



ADDKESSES. 



The following addresses are recorded for the pur- 
pose of aiding descendants in keeping their line of 
descent perfect as the years roll on, and in the hope 
that many will renew old friendship long waned 
from the loss of P. O. address: 



Albritten, Mrs. Pearl, Mayfield, 
Ky. 

Alexander, Mrs., W. C, Mem- 
phis, Tenn. 

Allen, D. H., Edna, Tex.; J. H., 
Edna, Tex. 

Allensworth, Mrs. J. T., Atchi- 
son, Kan. 

Ames, Mrs. Helen M., Evans- 
ville, Ind. 

Anderson, Mrs. Abner, Danville, 
Va.; Mrs S. A., Eichmond, 
Va. 

Andrews, Mrs. J. E., Brighton, 
111. 

Bagby, Mrs. J. H., Waco, Tex.; 

J. Z., Waco, Tex.; L. W., 

Waco, Tex. 
Bailey, Mrs. Mary 0., Nellie 

P. O., Cal. 
Bain, Mrs. Wm., Lexington, 

Ky. 

Barrow, B. F., Martinsville, 
Va.; Peter T., Danville, Va. 

Bassett, Mrs. C. D., Eichmond, 
Mo. 

Beaner, Mrs. Mary E., Pitts- 
field, 111. 

Beattie, R. M., Memphis, Tenn. 

Belt, I3enjamin Lloyd, New 
York, N. Y.; Mrs. M. A., 
Lynchburg, Va. 

Benning, Mrs. Nancy J., Can- 
ton, Mo. 

Berry, Mrs. J. T., McKinney, 
Tex. 

Bilmer, Mrs. Elizabeth M., New 
Orleans, La. 

Bland, John A., Pembroke, Ky.; 
John B., Rice, Tex, 

Boggess, Mrs. Eliza J., Givard, 
111. 

Boulware, Mrs. Sanford 0., 
Campbellsburg, Ky. 

Boyle, Mrs. St. John, Louis- 
ville, Ky. 



Brackenridge, Mrs. J. M., Aus- 
tin, Tex. 

Brannin, A. 0., Louisville, Ky.; 
Miss Anna, Cisco, Tex.; John 
S., Louisville, Ky.; Lewis E., 
Cisco, Tex. 

Bright, Mrs. Horatio, Versailles, 
Ky. 

Brown, Mrs. Paul P., Jackson- 
ville, Fla. 

Buck, Mrs. S., Waco, Tex.; 
Miss Miriam, Waco, Tex. 

Budd, Dr. Geo. A., Frankfort, 
Ky. 

Bull, Mrs. G. W., Na;shville, 
Tenn. 

Cabell, Ashley, St. Louis, Mo. 

Caldwell, Isaac, Horse Cave, 
Ky.; Mrs. J. A., Atlanta, Ga.; 
Mrs. J. L., Huntington, W. 
Va.; Junius, Louisville, Ky.; 
Miss Lucy A., Atlanta, Ga. 

Carrington, Mrs. E. B., Waco, 
Tex. 

Cass, Mrs. Nathan, Cameron, 
Tex. 

Cayee, Miss Alice J., Farming- 
ton, Mo. 

Clapp, Mrs. L. M., Memphis, 
Tenn. 

Clardy, Mrs. Martin, Farming- 
ton, Mo. 

Cocke, Miss Helen M., Colum- 
bia, S. C. 

Cole, H. W., Danville, Va. 

Collard, Mrs. Mary E., Tyler, 
Tex. 

Collins, Edgar, Dallas, Ore. 

Colmery, Mrs. C. P., Edwards, 
Miss. 

Conlon, Mrs. John, Hannibal, 
Mo. 

Cooper, Mrs. J. E., New Cas- 
tle, Ky. 

Crossett, Mrs. H. A., Big 
Springs, Tex. 



ADDEESSES. 



435 



Cruteher, Asa P., Terrell, Tex.; 

Isaac H., Terrell, Tex. 
Gumming, Mrs. W. M., Wil- 



mington, N. C. 



Daniel, Mrs. Bettie D., Martins- 
ville, Va. 

Deathridge, Mrs. Charles, Kan- 
sas City, Mo. 

Dickinson, C. N., Hollins, Va.; 
Thomas H., Worsham, Va. 

Dodge, Miss Jane V., Evans- 
ville, Ind. 

Drane, Edward M., Frankfort, 

Ky. 

Dupuy, Andrew Lowe, Port- 
land, Ore.; Mrs. Augustine, 
Austin. Tex.; B. F., Long 
Beach, Cal.; B. H., Water- 
bury, Conn.; B. H., Water 
Valley, Miss.; B. H., Selma, 
La.; Eev. B. H., Beverly, W. 
Va.; Edmond H., Snyder, 
Tex.; Edmund L., Rockport, 
Ky.; Edward L., Blaekstone, 
Va.; Miss Ella Nash, Bal- 
ham, Va.; Miss Fannie, Aus- 
tin, Tex.; Flood E., Graham, 
Va.; Francis A., Long Beach, 
Cal.; George R., Greensboro, 
N. C; George A., Chicagp, 
111.; Henry G., Marlin, Tex.; 
Dr. H. R., Norfolk, Va.; Her- 
bert. Pittsburg, Pa.; Judge, 
J. A., Parkersburg, W. Va.; 
Judge J. R., Los Angeles, 
Cal.; J. T., Lynchburg, Va.; 
Dr. J. T., Powhatan C. H., 
Va.; J. W. Murphy, Miss.; 

_- J. W., Powderly, Ala. ; James, 
Ironton, 0.; James H., Chi- 
cago, 111.; James L., Cincin- 
nati, 0.; John B., Redmond, 
Wash.; John W., Roanoke, 
Va.; John M., Franklin Fur- 
nace, O. ; John Wesley, Dale- 
ville, Ind.; Joseph L., Dur- 
bin, W. Va.; Miss Julia E.. 
Davidson, N. C; Lewis C, 
Cincinnati, 0. ; Louis D., Huff- 
man, Ala.; Miss Louisa A., 
Davidson, N. C; Miss Loulie 
R., Parkersburg, W. Va. ; 
Mrs. Lucy J., Austin, Tex.; 
Paul B., Durbin, W. Va.; 
Richard S., Ironton, O. ; Rob- 
ert G., Nordhoff, Cal. ; Roland 



a^ 



T., Junction City, Tex.; Ross- 
well, Argentum, Ky.; Samuel 
E., Ouray, Colo.; Samuel L., 
Cincinnati, O.; Sidney T., 
Marion, Ky.; Thomas J., 
Portsmouth, O.; Dr. Treva- 
nian, Ironton, O.; Mrs. Vir- 
ginia, Argentum, Ky. 
Durk^e,, Mrs. T, L., Canton, Mo. .- ;- 

Eades, Robert 0., Alden, Kan.; 
Mrs. H. R., Red Moon, Okla. 

Earle, Rev. F. R., Canehill, Ark. 

Early, C. C, Louisville, Ky. 

Edmunds, Nicholas B., Hop- 
kinsville, Ky. 

Eggleston, Beverly P., Char- 
lotte C. H., Va.; David Q., 
Richmond, Va.; Joseph D., 
Worsham, Va.; Dr. Joseph 
D., Worsham, Va. ; Rev. Rich- 
ard B., Richmond, Va. 

Faulds, Mrs. J. A., Owensboro, 
Ky. 

Faulkner, E. L., Austin, Tex.; 
Mrs. Johnaphine S., Austin, 
Tex.; Richard C, Oklahoma 
City, Okla.; Mrs. Susan P., 
Sherman, Tex. 

Finlev, Mrs. John R., Marion, 
Ky^ 

Flournoy, Nicholas E., Char- 
lotte C. H., Va.; Dr. Wil- 
liam S., Charlotte C. H., Va. 

Forrister, Mrs. Richard, Wood- 
land, Cal. 

Fowler, Mrs. J. W., Memnhis, 
Tenn. 

Franke, Mrs. Harry, Charlotte 
C. H., Va. 

Fuqua, Mrs. Gentry, Monroe 
cty.. Mo. 

Gant, Mrs. Mary L., Jackson, 
Miss. 

Garnett, Mrs. Thomas, Wash- 
ington, D. C. 

Gilliam, Clifton D.. Clear 
Springs, Ky.; Freddie E., 
Mayfield, Ky,; Harry E., 
Lynchburg, Va.; Homer A., 
Leader, Ky.; Richard C, 
Moran, Kan.; Thos. Dupuy, 
Hixburg, Va. 

Glascock, Mrs. Susan E., New 
London, Mo. 



436 



ADDRESSES. 



Goffe, Charles H., Chicago, 111.; 
Theo. N., Springfield, Mo. 

Goodwin, George M., Nashville, 
Tenn. ; William W., Memphis, 
Tenn.; Mrs. T. P., Oshkosh, 
Wis. 

Gough, Mrs. Fannie A., Sher- 
man, Tex. 

Graham, Mrs. Robert, Mayville, 
Ore. 

Gray, Mrs. Ben. F., St. Louis, 
Mo.; Mrs. H. P., Long Grove, 

Ky- 

Gregory, Chas. H., Atchison, 
Kan. ; Edgeworth, Dycusburg, 
Ky.; Joseph M., Kansas City, 
Mo.; Joseph M., Memphis, 
Tenn. 

Grimshaw, Miss Lelia, Sedalia, 
Mo.; Thomas T., Sedalia, 
Mo. 

Gunnell, Allen T., Colorado 
Springs, Colo.; Alva H., 
Grants Pass, Ore.; Volney C, 
Ogden, Utah. 

Hackney, Mrs. G. W., Spring- 
field, Mo. 

Hairston, Mrs. G. S., Edgewood, 
Va. 

Halbert, Dr. 0. L, Waco, Tex. 

Hall, Mrs. R. H., La Grange, 
Tex. 

Hamby, Mrs. Michael, Kosoma, 
Ind. Ter. 

Harris, Mrs. Mary S., Kahoka, 
Mo. 

Harrison, Mrs. M. E., Spring- 
field, Mo.; Mrs. W. Q., Gran- 
nie, Ark. 

Hatcher, Chas. M., Boston, 
Mass.; Jerry, Glasgow, Ky. 

Hawkins, Miss Susan, Middles- 
boro, Ky. 

Hewitt, Mrs. Virgil, Frankfort, 
Ky. 

Hodgen, Dr. Joseph D., San 
Francisco, Cal. 

Holladay, Mrs. J. Z., Charlottes- 
ville, Va-. 

Holman, Mrs. Nathan, La 
Grange, Tex. 

Howard, Mrs. Alfred G., Au- 
gusta, Ga.; Joseph B., Lang- 
ley, S. C. 



Huggins, William, St. Joseph, 

Mo. 
Hurt, Mrs. S. S., Chatham, Va. 
Irwin, Mrs. J. N., Keokuk, la. 

Jackson, Mrs. Elizabeth L., 
Rockport, Ky. 

Jeffress, Mrs. A. G., Worsham, 
Va. 

Johnson, Mrs, Charles, Bodie, 
Cal.; Mrs. L. F., Indianapolis, 
Ind. 

Johnston, Mrs. A. L., Denison, 
Tex.; Mrs. Florence D., Los 
Angeles, Gal.; John T., Dal- 
las, Tex.; Dr. Prentiss D., 
Pocahontas, Va. 

Josey, Mrs. J. R., Wallis, Tex. 

Kean, Mrs. W. C, Balham, Va. 
Kevil, Mrs. Bessie J., Russell- 

ville, Ky. 
Kimberlin, Mrs. I. J., Sherman, 

Tex. 

Lacv, Mrs. J. H., Winchester, 

Va. 
Latham, Mrs. T. J., Memphis, 

Tenn. 
Lattimore, Mrs. 0. S., Fort 

Worth, Tex. 
Leeper, Mrs. Jennie, Winfield, 

Kan. 
Lewellen, Charles T., Kahoka, 

Mo.; Eddie B., McCune, Mo.; 

George E., Winchester, Mo.; 

James D., Vandalia, Mo. ; Jef - 

ferson, Vandalia, Mo. ; Samuel 

E., Mayville, Ore.; Willis N., 

Vandalia, Mo. 
Llewellvn, Charles T., Kahoka, 

Mo. ; Dr. G. E., Wayland, Mo. 
Lewis, Mrs. Maude M., Kahoka, 

Mo. 
Ligon, Mrs. G. B., Fort Worth, 

Tex. 
Lillie, Mrs. Josephine, Mayville, 

Ore. 
Lingle, Mrs. W. L., Atlanta, 

Ga. 
Linley, Mrs. Fannie G., Atchi- 
son, Kan. 
Logan, Dr. C. C, St. Joseph, 

Mo.; Frank P., Kansas City, 

Mo.; John S., St. Joseph, 

Mo.; Dr. John S., St. Joseph, 

Mo. 



ADDRESSES. 



437 



Love, Wm. T., Keokuk, la. 
Luke, Miss Ethel J., Spring- 
field, 111. 
Lykins, Wm. L., New York, 

N. y. 

MacGregor, Mrs. Thomas A., 
Hawesville, Ky. 

Major, Miss Sallie, Sedalia, Mo. 

Marshall, W. M., Mobile, Ala. 

Martin, Mrs. James, Leaksville, 
N. C; Joseph B., Reidsville, 
N. C. 

McCance, Mrs. Robert, Kinsley, 
Kan. 

MeClure, Rev. A. D., Wilming- 
ton, N. C. 

McKinley, Ashley, Moulton, la. 

Mclvinsey, Mrs. M. F., Danville, 
Va. 

MeLeod, Mrs. K. A., Jonesboro, 
N. C. 

Means, Mrs. B. V., Chicago, 111. 

Mebane, Dr. D. C, Parsons, 
Pa.; Rev. B. W., Mebane, 
N. C; Rev. W. N., Colliers- 
town, Va. 

Middleton, Mrs. John, Louis- 
ville, Ky.; Mrs. Lizzie 0., 
Kansas City, Mo. 

Mizner, Mrs. J. S., Nicholas- 
ville, Ky. 

Moore, Mrs. Thomas T., Hick- 
man Mills, Mo. 

Morton, John T., Lynchburg, 
Va.; Mrs. Mary L., Pamplin, 
Va.; Mrs. Samuel, South 
Boston, Va. 

Moss, James, Oakland, Cal.; 
James H., Columbia, Mo.; 
Dr. W. W., Columbia, Mo. 

Muir, Mrs. V. E^ Abilene, Tex-.. 

Nelson, Miss Annie, Alton, Ky.; 
Wm., Alton, Ky.; 

Nesbitt, Mrs. M. C, Hawes- 
ville, Ky. 

Norton, Caldwell, Louisville, 

Ky. 

Offutt, Mrs. Z. F., Shelbyville, 

Ky. 
O'Neill, Richard, Bakersfield, 

Cal. 



Overall, Mrs. John H., St. Louis, 
Mo.; Judge John H., St. 
Louis, Mo.; Sidney R., St. 
Louis, Mo. 

Owen, Clark L., Edna, Tex. 

Parker, R. A., Memphis, Tenn. 

Parsons, Mrs. J. B., Monroe, La. 

Patton, Mrs. J. G., Decatur, Ga. 

Payne, Mrs. Sallie S., Chatham, 
Va.; Thomas J., Kansas City, 
Mo. 

Peers, Valentine, Gainesville, 
Tex. 

Pileher, Mrs. T. J., Lexington, 
Ky. 

Pittman, Mrs. H. D., St. Louis, 
LIo. 

Potter, Mrs. Fred. E., Elmira, 
N. Y. 

Prater, Mrs. James G., Knox- 
ville, Tenn. 

Pryon, S. M., New Castle, Ky. , 

'i'< hi ' P > .'i-rr }}:■ ti, .. A-~ » '" /■...■:'-»'♦• 

Radford, Mrs. B. L., Owensbdro, 
Ky. 

Rainey, George, Terrell, Tex.; 
Horace, Columbia, Tenn.; 
Isaac N., Memphis, Tenn.; 
Joseph M,, Memphis, Tenn.; 
Robert M., Sherman, Tex.; 
W. G., Columbia, Tenn. 

Ramsay, Mrs. F. P., Clarksville, 
Tenn.; Mrs. S. A., Laredo, 
Tex. 

Ratcliffe, Mrs. Allen, Ports- 
mouth, 0. 

Reeg, Mrs. George P., Ports- 
mouth, O. 

Reeves, Mrs. O. T., Blooming- 
ton, O. 

Ritchey, Mrs. W. H., Sedalia, 
Mo. 

i<oberts, Mrs. C. H., Charlotte 
C H., Va. 

Rogers, Mrs. Joseph U., Glas- 
gow, Ky. 

Ross, Mrs. Nancy A., Perry, 
Mo. 

Rowland, Henry, Eminence. Ky.; 
Thomas S., Eminence, Ky. 

Russell, Athur L.. Arbela, Mo.; 
Edward, Ellcnsburg, Wash. 

Samuel, Richard, New Castle, 
Ky. 



438 



ADDRESSES. 



Scanland, Edgar, Mineola, Mo.; 
Miss Grace, Mineola, Mo.; 
Miss Nellie, Mineola, Mo. 

Scearce, Mrs. Henry, Higgins- 
ville. Mo. 

Scott, Mrs. Sallie E., Charlotte 
C. H., Va. 

Senior, T. H., New Castle, Ky. 

Sergeant, Mrs. Wm. T., Greens- 
boro, N. C. 

Sevier, Mrs. Jennie, Richmond, 
Mo. 

Shearer, Mrs. T. C, Columbia, 

Ky- 

Shore, Mrs. Robert E., Rich- 
mond, Va. 
Simmons, Mrs. John H., Jersey- 

ville, 111. 
Simpson, Eugene, Terry, Miss. 
Smith, C. H., Payette, Ida.; C. 

O., Louisville, Ky.; Mrs. H. 

L., Davidson, N. C; Mrs. 

Luther, Monroe, La.; Mrs. 

Pearl, Mayville, Ore.; Rev. 

Robert A., Woodbine, Ida.; 

Thomas C, Denver, Colo.; 

Virgil D., Louisville, Ky.; 

William H., Fort Worth, Tex.; 

Z. F., Lcjuisville, Ky.; Rev. 

Zack, Louisville, Ky. 
Spencer, J. B., Palestine, Tex.j 

Mrs. T. C, Palestine, Tex.; 

Thomas C, Palestine, Tex. 
Stein, Mrs. Marshall, Raco, Neb. 
Stephens, Mrs. Agnes M., Titus- 

ville, Pa.; Mrs. E. W., Colum- 
bia, Mo.; Mrs. W. J., Titus- 

ville, Pa. 
Stith, Mrs. J. C, Kansas City, 

Mo. 
Stone, Mrs. Clark, Martinsville, 

Va. ; Mrs. Lucie Perkins, Hol- 

lins, Va. 
Stovall, George A., Memphis, 

Tenn.; Wm. H., Memphis, 

Tenn. 
Sutton, EdAvard T., Curryville, 

Mo.; Eleaza C, Vandalia, 

Mo.; Mrs. J. Price, St. Louis, 

Mo. ; N. H., Farber, Mo. 

Taylor, Mrs. James, Columbia, 
Ky.; Mrs. Julian, Alexandria, 
Va.; L. H., Peoria, 111. 

Terry, Alva L., Louisville, Ky. 

Thomasson, John T.. New York, 
N. Y.; Nelson, Chicago, 111. 



Thornton, Frank F., Crewe, 
Va.; Louis D,, Petersburg, 
Va. 

Tinsley, James W., East Rad- 
ford, Va.; Robert L., Fort 
Worth, Tex. 

Tootle, Harry M., St. Joseph, 
Mo.; Milton, St. Joseph, Mo. 

Trabue, Dr. B. M., Allensville, 
Ky.; Charles E., Alton, 111.; 
David L., Vieksburg, Miss.; 
Edmund F., Louisville, Ky.; 
Edwin P., Carlinville, 111.; 
Miss Etta, Pembroke, Ky.; 
Haskins, Portland, Ore.; 
James P., McCune, Kan.; Dr. 
L. P., Elkton, Ky.; Luther, 
Girard, 111.; Miss Mattie, Al- 
lensville, Ky.; Miss Mattie 
W., Nashville, Tenn.; Mc- 
Dowell, Pembroke, Ky. ; Rich- 
ard, Louisville, Ky.; Robert, 
Jackson, Miss.; Stephen, 
Louisville, Ky.; William, 
Louisville, Kv. ; Wm, A., 
Carthage, Tex.\ Wm. B., Dor- 
chester, 111.; Wm. H., New 
York, N. Y. 

Turner, Mrs. H. R., Campbells- 
ville, Ky. 

Van Culin, Trabue, Denver, 
Colo.; Wm. T., Philadelphia, 
Pa. 

Walbert, Dr. O. I., Waco, Tex. 

Walker, Mrs. J. H., Marion, 
Ky.; Dr. John, Lynchburg, 
Va.; Rev. Wm. T., Rowland, 
N. C. 

Warinner, Mrs. H. C, Memphis, 
Tenn. 

Watkins, Rev. Asa D., Bristol, 
Tenn.; Daniel G., Blanch, N. 
C; John D., Laredo, Tex.; 
Mary E., Cascade, Va.; Miss 
Mary T., Spencer, Va.; Mrs. 
Richard H., Farmville, Va. 

Watson, Dr. T. J., Denver, 
Colo.; Mrs. Samuel T., New 
London, Mo.; Mrs. Van D., 
Guerneville, Cal. 

Weber, Kossuth W., Farming- 
ton, Mo. 

Wheeler, Mrs. J. B., San Fra.n- 
cisco, Cal. ; Mrs. J. W„ Louis- 
ville, Ky. 



ADDRESSES. 



439 



White, Mrs. John S., San Fran- 
cisco, Cal. 

Willson, Harold, Rockdale, Tex.; 
Herbert G., Taylor, Tex.; 
Mrs. Howard E., Rockdale, 
Tex.; Hodgen I., Taylor, Tex.; 
Parker O., Taylor, Tex. ; Ross, 
Rockdale, Tex. 

Wilson, Mrs. E. L., Waterford, 
Va. 



Winslow, H. M., Harriman, 
Tenn. 

Woodson, Urey, Owensboro, Ky. 

Wooldridge, Egbert, Memphis, 
Tenn. 

Worcester, Mrs. Davie L., Cin- 
cinnati, O. 

Wynn, Misa Mary E., Coflfee- 
ville, Miss. 



By the use of the Index, the 
lineage of persons can be easily 
ascertained. 



THE END. 






ERRATA AND CORRIGENDA. 



It is almost impossible to get out a book of such complicacy 
fts this without slight errors. As far as these have been observed 
they are corrected as follows: 

Page 180, twentieth line from top, for No. 20, read No. 19. 

Page 191, fifth line from bottom, for Eloises, read Eloise«. 

Page 193, first line from top, for VII, read VIII. 

Page 199, first line from top, for (vii), read (viii). 

Page 214, eleventh line from bottom, for C. and Rufus C, 
read C". and Rufus C^. 

Page 216, eleventh line from top, for Hart, read Hurt. 

Page 219, eighth line from bottom, for Miller, read Miller^. 

Page 231, seventh line from top, for B., read B^. 

Page 273, third line from top, for IX, read ix. 

Page 279, second line from bottom, for Sim, read Sim^. 

Page 282, eighth line from top, for Wells, read Wells^. 

Page 284, second line from bottom, for Overton, read Overton*. 

Page 297, twelfth line from top, for Susan^, read Susanfl. 

Page 305, fifth line from bottom, for L^., read L^. 

Page 305, second line from bottom, for Terrell, read Terrell. 

Page 343, fifth line from top, for ii, read (ii). 

Page 348, fourth line from bottom, superior numbers should 
be «. 

Page 364, thirteenth line from bottom, for Warner, read 
Warners. 

Page 369, thirteenth line from bottom, for (p. 386), read 
(p. 368). 

Page 411, for Hart, read Hurt. 

Page 433, for Woodsan, read Woodson. 



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